Will you come back? : Quantitative analysis of return migration among Swedes born 1978

This paper is exploring return migration in Sweden by implementing logistic regression technics on the cohort born 1978. In order to evaluate how socio-economic and geographical characteristics influence individuals propensities to re-circulate to the municipality of origin. Previous studies have in...

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Main Author: Saarensilta, Timo
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Umeå universitet, Kulturgeografi 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-123214
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-umu-1232142016-09-01T05:17:43ZWill you come back? : Quantitative analysis of return migration among Swedes born 1978engSaarensilta, TimoUmeå universitet, Kulturgeografi2016return migrationlogistic regression analysissocio-spatial inequalitiesurban hierarchySwedenThis paper is exploring return migration in Sweden by implementing logistic regression technics on the cohort born 1978. In order to evaluate how socio-economic and geographical characteristics influence individuals propensities to re-circulate to the municipality of origin. Previous studies have indicated that socio-economic status is a selective trait that can either push or pull return migrants, depending on the setting. The theory of urban hierarchies was also applied to investigate if people were more likely to move back to certain region types. The calculations showed that 22 % of the movers had returned to their place of origin, with regional variations ranging from 18-30 %. The regression result revealed that a high socio-economic status decreased the likelihood of returning, while growing up in metropolitan city and having strong social capital in the place of origin increased the propensity. The findings were further supporting that movers have higher incomes than stayers, while return migrants gained less on their re-location in relation to all movers. I argue that these varying likelihoods depend on structural socio-economic divisions, which are pulling human capital to the metropolitan regions and causing a brain drain in the periphery. These population trends are replicating themselves over time and it is assumed that these processes are to enforce the regional disparities in the future.   Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-123214application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic return migration
logistic regression analysis
socio-spatial inequalities
urban hierarchy
Sweden
spellingShingle return migration
logistic regression analysis
socio-spatial inequalities
urban hierarchy
Sweden
Saarensilta, Timo
Will you come back? : Quantitative analysis of return migration among Swedes born 1978
description This paper is exploring return migration in Sweden by implementing logistic regression technics on the cohort born 1978. In order to evaluate how socio-economic and geographical characteristics influence individuals propensities to re-circulate to the municipality of origin. Previous studies have indicated that socio-economic status is a selective trait that can either push or pull return migrants, depending on the setting. The theory of urban hierarchies was also applied to investigate if people were more likely to move back to certain region types. The calculations showed that 22 % of the movers had returned to their place of origin, with regional variations ranging from 18-30 %. The regression result revealed that a high socio-economic status decreased the likelihood of returning, while growing up in metropolitan city and having strong social capital in the place of origin increased the propensity. The findings were further supporting that movers have higher incomes than stayers, while return migrants gained less on their re-location in relation to all movers. I argue that these varying likelihoods depend on structural socio-economic divisions, which are pulling human capital to the metropolitan regions and causing a brain drain in the periphery. These population trends are replicating themselves over time and it is assumed that these processes are to enforce the regional disparities in the future.  
author Saarensilta, Timo
author_facet Saarensilta, Timo
author_sort Saarensilta, Timo
title Will you come back? : Quantitative analysis of return migration among Swedes born 1978
title_short Will you come back? : Quantitative analysis of return migration among Swedes born 1978
title_full Will you come back? : Quantitative analysis of return migration among Swedes born 1978
title_fullStr Will you come back? : Quantitative analysis of return migration among Swedes born 1978
title_full_unstemmed Will you come back? : Quantitative analysis of return migration among Swedes born 1978
title_sort will you come back? : quantitative analysis of return migration among swedes born 1978
publisher Umeå universitet, Kulturgeografi
publishDate 2016
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-123214
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