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Title: Geographical mobility: March 1985 to March 1986. Author: Hansen KA. Journal: Curr Popul Rep Popul Charact; 1988 Jun; (425):1-110. PubMed ID: 12158796. Abstract: This report provides detailed statistics on the geographical mobility of Americans, using data from the March 1986 Current Population Survey. The annual rate of moving declined to 18.6% during the 1985-1986 period, down from 20.2% for the previous period. This decline is due to a drop in the rate of local moving (within the same county) from 13.1% to 11.3%. The rate of moving from 1 state to another remained at about 3% per year, while the rate of moving between countries within the same state was 3.7%. Neither the Midwest nor the South had a significant change in population through internal migration for the 1985-1986 period. This was a deviation from the usual pattern of net migration losses for the Midwest and net migration gains for the South. Metropolitan areas in the aggregate gained population (+633,000) at the expense of nonmetropolitan areas. However, the central cities of metropolitan areas lost population to both nonmetropolitan and the suburbs (-1,366,000 persons), while the suburbs gained population from both of the other types of areas (+1,999,000).[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]