Affiliation: | Department of Geography and Regional Development, College of Business and Public Administration, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, U.S.A. Graduate Program in Urban and Regional Planning and Departments of Geography and Economics, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, U.S.A. |
Abstract: | The rich geography and complex temporal trends of U.S. interstate labor force migration are portrayed. The most commonly reported net migration statistics hide multi-faceted patterns of state-to-state exchange. Maps depicting net migration balances show that much population redistribution has been taking place counter to the popularly conceived Frostbelt-to-Sunbelt flow. Significant net migration exchange takes place within each of the major regions of the U.S. as well as between them. Principal component analyses carried out on gross state-to-state flow tables for 1960–1965, 1965–1970, and 1970–1975 suggest the existence of a set of remarkably stable migration subsystems, despite the heralded net migration turnarounds in nonmetropolitan-to-metropolitan and south-to-north patterns of flow. |