Understanding Couple Migration towards Core and Peripheral Regions: The Role of Men’s and Women’s Education

IF 1.5 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY Comparative Population Studies Pub Date : 2022-07-13 DOI:10.12765/cpos-2022-12
N. Kooiman, M. Das
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Abstract

Numerous studies have demonstrated that men’s educational profiles dominate couple migration decisions. However, most of these investigated the US context or were conducted in the previous century. This study examines the role of both partners’ educational attainments in couple migration in recent years in a new context: the Netherlands. The Netherlands is one of the countries in which women surpass men in educational attainment. We take a geographical perspective and test Costa and Kahn’s (2000) hypothesis that power couples – two partners with university degrees – are more likely than other couples to migrate to metropolitan areas with dense labour markets in order to solve their “colocation problem.” Data are derived from the Dutch Labour Force Survey between 2006 and 2015. The research population consists of all opposite-sex married and unmarried couples aged 18-45 (N = 90,314 couples). By linking the respondents to integral register data, we tracked all couples until three years after the interview date. The results show that both men’s and women’s human capital increases migration propensities, although effect sizes are relatively small. Social factors such as the geographical distance to birthplace and parents appear to play a significant role in couple migration. We found only partial support for Costa and Kahn’s (2000) colocation hypothesis. Power couples who live in the core region are less likely than other couples to migrate to more peripherally located regions. However, periphery-to-core migration is only affected by the male partner’s human capital, not by hers. Hence, the concentration of power couples in Dutch metropolitan areas probably stems from highly educated, single, young, urban adults who migrated there individually and who tend to stay there after union formation.
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理解夫妻向核心和外围地区迁移:男女教育的作用
许多研究表明,男性的教育背景决定了夫妇的移民决定。然而,这些研究大多是在美国背景下进行的,或者是在上个世纪进行的。本研究在一个新的背景下考察了近年来伴侣双方的教育程度在夫妻移民中的作用:荷兰。荷兰是女性受教育程度超过男性的国家之一。我们从地理角度检验了Costa和Kahn(2000)的假设,即有权力的夫妇——双方都有大学学历——比其他夫妇更有可能迁移到劳动力市场密集的大都市地区,以解决他们的“同居问题”。数据来自2006年至2015年的荷兰劳动力调查。研究人群包括所有18-45岁的异性已婚和未婚夫妇(N = 90,314对夫妇)。通过将受访者与积分登记数据联系起来,我们跟踪了所有夫妇,直到访谈日期后三年。结果表明,男性和女性的人力资本都增加了移民倾向,尽管效应量相对较小。与出生地和父母的地理距离等社会因素似乎在夫妻迁移中起着重要作用。我们只发现部分支持Costa和Kahn(2000)的托管假说。生活在核心地区的权贵夫妇比其他夫妇更不可能迁移到更外围的地区。然而,从外围到核心的迁移只受男性伴侣人力资本的影响,而不受其人力资本的影响。因此,荷兰大都市地区权力夫妇的集中可能源于受过高等教育、单身、年轻的城市成年人,他们单独移民到那里,并倾向于在工会成立后留在那里。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
26 weeks
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