Rural Youth: Stayers, Leavers and Return Migrants

There has been for some time substantial concern regarding the loss of young people in rural communities. There is a sense that most rural communities offer few opportunities for their younger people, requiring them to leave for urban communities, most likely not to return. While there is a consider...

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Main Authors: Mayer, Francine, Morissette, Rene, Dupuy, Richard
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/catalogue/11F0019M2000152
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:stc:stcp3e:2000152e 2023-05-15T17:22:56+02:00 Rural Youth: Stayers, Leavers and Return Migrants Mayer, Francine Morissette, Rene Dupuy, Richard https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/catalogue/11F0019M2000152 unknown https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/catalogue/11F0019M2000152 preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:43:56Z There has been for some time substantial concern regarding the loss of young people in rural communities. There is a sense that most rural communities offer few opportunities for their younger people, requiring them to leave for urban communities, most likely not to return. While there is a considerable body of research on interprovincial migration, relatively little is currently known about migration patterns in rural and urban areas in Canada. According to our analysis, in virtually all provinces young people 15 to 19 years of age are leaving rural areas in greater proportions than urban areas - in part to pursue post-secondary education. While there are more complex migration patterns affecting the 20-29 age group, the net result of all migration is that the Atlantic provinces - as well as Manitoba and Saskatchewan - are net losers of their rural population aged 15-29. The problem is particularly acute in Newfoundland. In the Atlantic provinces, rural areas which fare worse than the national average - in terms of net gains of youth population - do so not because they have a higher than average percentage of leavers but rather because they are unable to attract a sufficiently high proportion of individuals into their communities. Of all individuals who move out of their rural community, at most 25% return to this community ten years later. The implication of this result is clear: one cannot count on return migration as a means of preserving the population size of a given cohort. Rather, rural areas must rely on inflows from other (urban) areas to achieve this goal. Some rural communities achieve this; that is, they register positive net in-migration of persons aged 25-29 or older, even though they incur a net loss of younger people. Individuals who move out of rural areas generally experience higher earnings growth than their counterparts who stay. However, it remains an open question in which direction the causality works: is the higher earnings growth the result of the migration process itself or does it reflect the possibility that people with higher earnings growth potential are more likely to become movers? Children and youth, Labour market activities, Mobility and migration, Population and demography, Rural Canada, Society and community Report Newfoundland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description There has been for some time substantial concern regarding the loss of young people in rural communities. There is a sense that most rural communities offer few opportunities for their younger people, requiring them to leave for urban communities, most likely not to return. While there is a considerable body of research on interprovincial migration, relatively little is currently known about migration patterns in rural and urban areas in Canada. According to our analysis, in virtually all provinces young people 15 to 19 years of age are leaving rural areas in greater proportions than urban areas - in part to pursue post-secondary education. While there are more complex migration patterns affecting the 20-29 age group, the net result of all migration is that the Atlantic provinces - as well as Manitoba and Saskatchewan - are net losers of their rural population aged 15-29. The problem is particularly acute in Newfoundland. In the Atlantic provinces, rural areas which fare worse than the national average - in terms of net gains of youth population - do so not because they have a higher than average percentage of leavers but rather because they are unable to attract a sufficiently high proportion of individuals into their communities. Of all individuals who move out of their rural community, at most 25% return to this community ten years later. The implication of this result is clear: one cannot count on return migration as a means of preserving the population size of a given cohort. Rather, rural areas must rely on inflows from other (urban) areas to achieve this goal. Some rural communities achieve this; that is, they register positive net in-migration of persons aged 25-29 or older, even though they incur a net loss of younger people. Individuals who move out of rural areas generally experience higher earnings growth than their counterparts who stay. However, it remains an open question in which direction the causality works: is the higher earnings growth the result of the migration process itself or does it reflect the possibility that people with higher earnings growth potential are more likely to become movers? Children and youth, Labour market activities, Mobility and migration, Population and demography, Rural Canada, Society and community
format Report
author Mayer, Francine
Morissette, Rene
Dupuy, Richard
spellingShingle Mayer, Francine
Morissette, Rene
Dupuy, Richard
Rural Youth: Stayers, Leavers and Return Migrants
author_facet Mayer, Francine
Morissette, Rene
Dupuy, Richard
author_sort Mayer, Francine
title Rural Youth: Stayers, Leavers and Return Migrants
title_short Rural Youth: Stayers, Leavers and Return Migrants
title_full Rural Youth: Stayers, Leavers and Return Migrants
title_fullStr Rural Youth: Stayers, Leavers and Return Migrants
title_full_unstemmed Rural Youth: Stayers, Leavers and Return Migrants
title_sort rural youth: stayers, leavers and return migrants
url https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/catalogue/11F0019M2000152
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/catalogue/11F0019M2000152
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