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Migration and the Economy in Cornwall. A quantitative analysis on the relationship between migration and the economy in the small areas of Cornwall Stuart Burley. Aims & methods. Explore the pattern of migration in Cornwall and the economic implications
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Migration and the Economy in Cornwall A quantitative analysis on the relationship between migration and the economy in the small areas of Cornwall Stuart Burley
Aims & methods • Explore the pattern of migration in Cornwall and the economic implications • Statistical analysis of 1991 census data • Small area analysis, electoral wards • Urbanisation & counterurbanisation
Urbanisation & counterurbanisation • Operational definitions • Urbanisation “a movement from a state of less concentration to a state of more concentration” (Tisdale 1942) • Counterurbanisation “a movement from a state of more concentration to a state of less concentration” (Berry 1976)
The migratory profile of Cornwall • Cornwall’s population increase over the last 20 years is solely attributable to migration • Increases by net migration is far higher than the UK average and higher than the South west region
The economic profile of Cornwall • Cornwall’s unemployment rates are far higher than the South west region and higher than the UK • Earnings in Cornwall are lower than the South west region and 22.8% lower than the UK
Why has Cornwall remained poor? • Structural disadvantages • Geographically peripheral without a large urban hub • Dependence on declining industries – fishing & agriculture • Only seasonal benefits from tourism
Why has Cornwall remained poor? • Population-led economic growth initiatives showed early signs of success • Economic factors, branch closures and relocations • Many former in-migrants now unemployed stayed behind
Why has Cornwall remained poor? • Particular type of in-migration • Many moving for quality of life motives rather than economic improvement • In-migrants more likely to leave the labour market than non-migrants • Economic benefit of migration may be dependent on the migratory strategies
Cornwall as the mirror image of the escalator region • Fielding (1992) The South east as an escalator region • Cornwall – the first and last stages of the escalator effect
Urbanisation – Density of internal migrants origins and destinations
Urbanisation – Labour market explanations • Migration as an equilibrating mechanism • Balances the labour demand differential between areas • Balances the earnings differential between areas
Urbanisation – Economic indicators of origins & destinations
Urbanisation – Labour market explanations • No significant difference in the economic profile of urban wards and the origin wards • Earnings are slightly lower than average in the urban wards • Little evidence to support labour market explanations
Urbanisation - Conclusions • Urbanisation of young internal migrants • Housing constraints as the most likely explanations • ‘Pull’ of greater affordability and availability of accommodation in urban areas
Counterurbanisation – Density of in-migrant origins and destinations
Counterurbanisation – Economic activity of 45-pensionable age in-migrants
Counterurbanisation – Unemployment of 45-pensionable age in-migrants
Counterurbanisation – Unemployment of 45-pensionable age in-migrants
Counterurbanisation – Equity rich work poor • High frequency of In-migrants aged 45-pensionable age in rural wards • High rates of home ownership • High rates of unemployment • Moving for quality of life reasons
Counterurbanisation – Equity rich work poor • House price differentials • In-migrants release capital through house price differentials • ‘Cash cushion’ • Chosen unemployment • Pre-retirement fund • Semi-retirement business ventures
Urbanisation & counterurbanisation – The relationship & implications • The equilibrating effect of migration on house prices • Destination prices become closer to the origin prices • Increases in the price of rural housing
Urbanisation & counterurbanisation residential property increases 1999-2002
Urbanisation & counterurbanisation – The relationship & implications • House prices increasing faster than earnings in the rural areas • Increased mortgage gap • Housing market disadvantages non-migrants but has advantages for in-migrants
First-time buyers unable to afford rural housing • Urbanisation of young internal migrants • ‘Push’ & ‘pull’ of housing – affordability and availability
Increased urbanisation of young people • Increased demand for employment in high unemployment areas • In-migration increases housing constraints and labour constraints • Incentives for younger people to leave the county
Stream of in-migration – equity rich work poor migrants • Counter-stream of out-migration – economically ambitious young migrants • Opposite of the South East ‘escalator’ • An ageing population • Increased social welfare costs for a reducing working-age population