This article empirically examines the impact on interstate net migration of differential state and local property tax and transfer policies in the United States by race, age and sex for the period 1965-70. The results offer considerable support to the Tiebout hypothesis that the consumer-voter moves to that area which best satisfies his preferences for public goods
Suburbanization is a dynamic process in American society. This study is a causal analysis of black a...
This paper argues that long-run trends in geographic segregation are inconsistent with models where ...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
This article empirically examines the impact on interstate net migration of differential state and ...
This empirical study investigates the Tiebout-Tullock hypothesis as it might have applied to net dom...
This study provides a preliminary empirical investigation as to whether black-consumer voters were a...
The theory known as the Tiebout Hypothesis concludes that an individual or family’s decision to move...
The results of this study for the 50 states imply that considerations of distance play an important ...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Cebula [1978] em-pirically tests the Tiebout hypothesis...
This study examines determinants of gross in-migration by race (white and black) over the 1965-1970 ...
This article examines the effects of state policy on net interstate migra-tion. Using Ordinary Least...
This study empirically investigates the impact of AFDC (welfare) policies, per capita property taxat...
This study investigates the impact of certain state and local government policies on 1960-70 migrati...
This study extends a recent study on migration according to race, i.e., white migrants on the one h...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
Suburbanization is a dynamic process in American society. This study is a causal analysis of black a...
This paper argues that long-run trends in geographic segregation are inconsistent with models where ...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
This article empirically examines the impact on interstate net migration of differential state and ...
This empirical study investigates the Tiebout-Tullock hypothesis as it might have applied to net dom...
This study provides a preliminary empirical investigation as to whether black-consumer voters were a...
The theory known as the Tiebout Hypothesis concludes that an individual or family’s decision to move...
The results of this study for the 50 states imply that considerations of distance play an important ...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Cebula [1978] em-pirically tests the Tiebout hypothesis...
This study examines determinants of gross in-migration by race (white and black) over the 1965-1970 ...
This article examines the effects of state policy on net interstate migra-tion. Using Ordinary Least...
This study empirically investigates the impact of AFDC (welfare) policies, per capita property taxat...
This study investigates the impact of certain state and local government policies on 1960-70 migrati...
This study extends a recent study on migration according to race, i.e., white migrants on the one h...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
Suburbanization is a dynamic process in American society. This study is a causal analysis of black a...
This paper argues that long-run trends in geographic segregation are inconsistent with models where ...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...