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Are College Graduates More Responsive to Distant Labor Market Opportunities?
232
Citations
32
References
2010
Year
Labor Market ParticipationEducationU.s. Census DataLabor Market IntegrationStatisticsHousingEconomicsPublic PolicyLabor Market OutcomeLabor MarketLabor EconomicsHigher EducationHigh Labor DemandSpatial EconomicsWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyLabor Market OpportunitiesBusinessSpatial DemographyLabor Market ImpactDemographyUnemployment
Are highly educated workers better at locating in areas with high labor demand? To answer this question, I use three decades of U.S. Census data to estimate a McFadden-style model of residential location choice. I test for education differentials in the likelihood that young workers reside in states experiencing positive labor demand shocks at the time these workers entered the labor market. I find effects of changes in state labor demand on college graduate location choice that are several times greater than for high school graduates. Nevertheless, medium-run wage effects of entry labor market conditions for college graduates equal or exceed those of less-educated workers.
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