Author
Listed:
- Cindy Smart
(Boston Consulting Group)
- Arthur Grimes
(Motu Economic and Public Policy Research
Victoria University of Wellington)
- Wilbur Townsend
(Motu Economic and Public Policy Research)
Abstract
This chapter addresses the determinants of migrant location choice within the migrant’s adopted country. We focus on two sets of location determinants: economic determinants and ethnic (country of origin) determinants. Ethnic determinants are found to be important across a wide range of studies. By contrast, prior literature indicates that impacts of economic factors differ according to the characteristics both of locations and of migrants. The first part of the chapter summarises key findings of prior studies into migrant location choice, focusing on economic and ethnic determinants. Much of the literature in this field relates to migrants to the United States of America. The second part of the chapter extends knowledge of migrant location choice by considering another country that hosts a high proportion of international migrants, New Zealand. We draw on unit record New Zealand census data from 2013 for this analysis. The importance of ethnic (country of origin) networks is confirmed in this analysis but so too is the importance of economic factors. The latter finding is in contrast to much of the US based literature. It plausibly reflects the greater emphasis that New Zealand places on skills-based migration relative to the United States. At a technical level, this study uses the average regional wage of the industry in which the migrant is employed, together with region fixed effects, which may contribute to more precise estimates of wage effects than does the more standard use of average regional wages.
Suggested Citation
Cindy Smart & Arthur Grimes & Wilbur Townsend, 2018.
"Ethnic and Economic Determinants of Migrant Location Choice,"
Advances in Spatial Science, in: Bianca Biagi & Alessandra Faggian & Isha Rajbhandari & Viktor A. Venhorst (ed.), New Frontiers in Interregional Migration Research, chapter 0, pages 181-204,
Springer.
Handle:
RePEc:spr:adspcp:978-3-319-75886-2_9
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-75886-2_9
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