Non-coresident family as a driver of migration change in a crisis: The case of the COVID-19 pandemic (2310.03254v3)
Abstract: Changes in U.S. migration during the COVID-19 pandemic show that many moved to less populated cities from larger cities, deviating from previous trends. In this study, building on prior work in the literature showing that the abundance of family ties is inversely related to population size, we analyze these migration changes with a focus on the crucial, yet overlooked factor of extended family. Employing two large-scale data sets, census microdata and mobile phone GPS relocation data, we show a collection of empirical results that paints a picture of migration change affected by kin. Namely, we find that people migrated closer to family at higher rates after the COVID-19 pandemic started. Moreover, even controlling for factors such as population density and cost of living, we find that changes in net in-migration tended to be larger and positive in cities with larger proportions of people who can be parents to adult children (our proxy for parental family availability, which is also inversely related to population size). Our study advances the demography-disaster nexus and amplifies ongoing literature highlighting the role of broader kinship systems in large-scale socioeconomic phenomena.
- Castro LJ, Rogers A (1984) What the age composition of migrants can tell us. Popul Bull UN 1983
- David-Barrett T (2019) Network effects of demographic transition. Sci Rep 9(1):2361
- David-Barrett T (2023) Network ecology of marriage. arXiv preprint arXiv:2310.05928
- Dukhovnov D, Zagheni E (2015) Who takes care of whom in the United States? Time transfers by age and sex. Popul Dev Rev 41(2):183–206
- Feehan DM, Mahmud AS (2021) Quantifying population contact patterns in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nat Commun 12(1):893
- Furstenberg FF (2020) Kinship reconsidered: research on a neglected topic. J Marriage Fam 82(1):364–382
- Haslag PH, Weagley D (2022) From LA to Boise: how migration has changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Available at SSRN 3808326
- Kan K (2007) Residential mobility and social capital. J Urban Econ 61(3):436–457
- Lee EK, Parolin Z (2021) The care burden during COVID-19: A national database of child care closures in the United States. Socius 7:23780231211032028
- Millington J (2000) Migration and age: the effect of age on sensitivity to migration stimuli. Reg Stud 34(6):521–533
- Missouri Census Data Center (2018) Geocorr 2018: geographic correspondence engine. https://mcdc.missouri.edu/applications/geocorr2018.html. Accessed 30 Jun 2023
- Mulder CH (2007) The family context and residential choice: a challenge for new research. Popul Space Place 13(4):265–278
- Pew Research Center (2022) The changing political geography of COVID-19 over the last two years. https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2022/03/03/the-changing-political-geography-of-covid-19-over-the-last-two-years/. Accessed 5 Sep 2023
- Rogerson PA, Kim D (2005) Population distribution and redistribution of the baby-boom cohort in the United States: recent trends and implications. Proc Natl Acad Sci 102(43):15319–15324
- Spectus (2021) Social impact. https://spectus.ai/social-impact/
- U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (2020) CAEMP25N Total full-time and part-time employment by NAICS industry. https://apps.bea.gov/iTable/?reqid=70#eyJhcHBpZCI6NzAsInN0ZXBzIjpbMSwyOV0sImRhdGEiOltbIlRhYmxlSWQiLCIzMyJdXX0=. Accessed 25 Nov 2021
- U.S. Census Bureau (2020) 2016—2019 American Community Survey 5-year estimates. https://data.census.gov. Accessed 30 Jun 2023
- U.S. Census Bureau (2021) County-to-county migration flows: 2015-2019 ACS. https://www.census.gov/data/tables/2019/demo/geographic-mobility/county-to-county-migration-2015-2019.html. Accessed 23 Sep 2022
- U.S. Census Bureau (2021) Understanding and using the American Community Survey Public Use Microdata Sample files: what data users need to know. https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs/library/handbooks/pums.html. Accessed 19 Jan 2024
- Völker B (2023) Networks in lockdown: the consequences of COVID-19 for social relationships and feelings of loneliness. Soc Netw 72:1–12
- Wellman B (1979) The community question: the intimate networks of East Yorkers. Am J Soc 84(5):1201–1231
- Wellman B, Wortley S (1989) Brothers’ keepers: situating kinship relations in broader networks of social support. Sociol Perspect 32(3):273–306
- White L (2001) Sibling relationships over the life course: a panel analysis. J Marriage Fam 63(2):555–568