This study critiques a prior study of migration determinants according to race, i.e., white migration versus nonwhite migration, to central cities in the U.S. We find evidence strongly suggesting simultaneity bias. In addition, the specification in the article being evaluated is flawed because it assumes that white migrants are attracted to central cities with higher income rather than higher incomes for whites. Similarly, the study being examined by this Comment is flawed because it assumes nonwhites are attracted not to areas with higher nonwhite incomes but with higher overall incomes. Furthermore, this Comment finds specification errors in the failure to adopt race-specific unemployment rates
Most of the research regarding immigration and immigrants to west-ern countries has focused on immig...
This multi-faceted study address a variety of topics. It first develops a formal model of why interr...
In the decades following World War II, the center of gravity in American urban ar-eas shifted from t...
This study critiques a prior study of migration determinants according to race, i.e., white migratio...
This study extends a recent study on migration according to race, i.e., white migrants on the one h...
The results of this study for the 50 states imply that considerations of distance play an important ...
This study examines determinants of gross in-migration by race (white and black) over the 1965-1970 ...
This study investigates the impact of certain state and local government policies on 1960-70 migrati...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Cebula [1978] em-pirically tests the Tiebout hypothesis...
Tregarthen (1977) claims that an increase in agglomeration economiesmay be the cause of migration to...
Kohn [11] recently has offered a critique of an earlier paper by myself published in this journal [1...
Summary. One prediction of the spatial mismatch hypothesis is that black residents of the central ci...
In a comment to Dahlberg, Edmark and Lundqvist (2012), Nekby and Pettersson-Lidbom (2012) argue (i) ...
Early research on migration in LDCs, initially motivated by labor market postulates offered by Harri...
Franklin D. Wilson for their suggestions and reactions to this paper during various stages of its de...
Most of the research regarding immigration and immigrants to west-ern countries has focused on immig...
This multi-faceted study address a variety of topics. It first develops a formal model of why interr...
In the decades following World War II, the center of gravity in American urban ar-eas shifted from t...
This study critiques a prior study of migration determinants according to race, i.e., white migratio...
This study extends a recent study on migration according to race, i.e., white migrants on the one h...
The results of this study for the 50 states imply that considerations of distance play an important ...
This study examines determinants of gross in-migration by race (white and black) over the 1965-1970 ...
This study investigates the impact of certain state and local government policies on 1960-70 migrati...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Cebula [1978] em-pirically tests the Tiebout hypothesis...
Tregarthen (1977) claims that an increase in agglomeration economiesmay be the cause of migration to...
Kohn [11] recently has offered a critique of an earlier paper by myself published in this journal [1...
Summary. One prediction of the spatial mismatch hypothesis is that black residents of the central ci...
In a comment to Dahlberg, Edmark and Lundqvist (2012), Nekby and Pettersson-Lidbom (2012) argue (i) ...
Early research on migration in LDCs, initially motivated by labor market postulates offered by Harri...
Franklin D. Wilson for their suggestions and reactions to this paper during various stages of its de...
Most of the research regarding immigration and immigrants to west-ern countries has focused on immig...
This multi-faceted study address a variety of topics. It first develops a formal model of why interr...
In the decades following World War II, the center of gravity in American urban ar-eas shifted from t...