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The Impact of Migration on Poverty Concentrations in the United States, 1995–2000
Authors:Matt Foulkes  Kai A Schafft
Institution:1. Department of Geography
University of Missouri;2. This research was supported in part by the Penn State Children, Youth and Families Consortium. We are grateful to several anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments. Direct correspondence to: Matt Foulkes, Department of Geography, University of Missouri, 8 Stewart Hall, Columbia, MO 65202;3. email: .;4. Department of Education Policy Studies
Penn State University
Abstract:Poverty is frequently conceptualized as an attribute of either people or places. Yet residential movement of poor people can redistribute poverty across places, affecting and reshaping the spatial concentration of economic disadvantage. In this article, we utilize 1995 to 2000 county‐to‐county migration data from the 2000 United States decennial census to explore how differential migration rates of the poor and nonpoor affect local incidence of poverty, and how migration reconfigures poverty rates across metropolitan, micropolitan, and noncore counties. We further examine the impact of differential migration rates on African American and Latino poverty rates, two groups that have experienced higher than average poverty rates and have a sizable presence in rural areas. Our analysis indicates that during the 1990s the poor moved at rates equal to or greater than the nonpoor, and that, especially in micropolitan counties, this movement tended to deepen existing poverty concentrations. Both African American and Latino migration patterns tended to reinforce existing poverty concentrations, a result similar to that of the population as a whole, although the migration patterns of both groups more severely exacerbated poverty in high‐poverty noncore counties.
Keywords:
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