USDA's Economic Research Service
TopicsTopics

Stay Connected

Follow ERS on Twitter
Subscribe to RSS feeds
Subscribe to ERS e-Newsletters.aspx
Listen to ERS podcasts
Read ERS blogs at USDA

Nonmetropolitan Outmigration Counties: Some Are Poor, Many Are Prosperous

by David McGranahan, John Cromartie, and Tim Wojan

Economic Research Report No. (ERR-107) 35 pp, November 2010

cover image for err107 Population loss through net outmigration is endemic to many rural areas. Over a third of nonmetro counties lost at least 10 percent of their population through net outmigration over 1988-2008. Some of these counties have had very high poverty rates, substantial loss in manufacturing jobs, and high unemployment. Lack of economic opportunity was likely a major factor in their high outmigration. Most high net outmigration counties, however, are relatively prosperous, with low unemployment rates, low high school dropout rates, and average household incomes. For these counties, low population density and less appealing landscapes distinguish them from other nonmetro counties. Both types of outmigration counties stand out on two measures, indicating that quality-of-life factors inhibit inmigration: a lack of retirees moving in and local manufacturers citing the area’s unattractiveness as a problem in recruiting managers and professionals.

Keywords: Migration, net migration, rural development, life-cycle migration, population growth, nonmetropolitan, nonmetro, rural economy, metro, rural America, census data, population growth, demographics

In this publication...

Charts and graphs (in .png format) from this report are available in the .zip file listed below. The .zip file also contains a document (readme.txt) that lists the name and title of each chart or graph file.

Need help with PDFs?

Order this Publication

Last updated: Sunday, May 27, 2012

For more information contact: David McGranahan, John Cromartie, and Tim Wojan