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The migrant network effect : an empirical analysis of rural-to-urban migration in South Africa

Recent empirical migration literature in South Africa suggests that access to physical and human capital, in the way of finance and education respectively, are key factors in increasing one’s probability of migrating. This paper attempts to extend this literature by directly measuring the extent to...

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Main Author: Stapleton, Caroline
Other Authors: Leibbrandt, Murray
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Stapleton, Caroline
author2 Leibbrandt, Murray
author_browse Leibbrandt, Murray
Stapleton, Caroline
author_facet Leibbrandt, Murray
Stapleton, Caroline
author_sort Stapleton, Caroline
collection Thesis
description Recent empirical migration literature in South Africa suggests that access to physical and human capital, in the way of finance and education respectively, are key factors in increasing one’s probability of migrating. This paper attempts to extend this literature by directly measuring the extent to which social capital, broadly defined as one’s access to a migrant network, affects the probability of rural-to-urban migration. Using the first nationally representative panel dataset in South Africa, the National Income Dynamics Study, and defining a rural-to-urban migrant as an individual who is observed moving from a rural area in the baseline wave (2008) to an urban area by Wave 3 (2012), I estimate a standard model of migration choice with the inclusion of one’s connection to a migrant network. This connection is measured by being part of a household in the baseline wave that contains somebody with current or recent experience as a labour migrant. In line with international migration literature, the empirical results suggest that access to a migrant network increases the likelihood of becoming a migrant (by between 2-3 percentage points). These findings are robust to the inclusion of the individual’s prior migration experience and employment status. Furthermore, an extension of the core analysis to assess the impact of genetic relatedness in conjunction with the migrant network effect suggests some evidence of a household bargaining process at play. The findings in this paper therefore suggest that social capital does indeed play a role along with physical and human capital in determining who migrates in South Africa.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/13747 The migrant network effect : an empirical analysis of rural-to-urban migration in South Africa Stapleton, Caroline Leibbrandt, Murray Economics Recent empirical migration literature in South Africa suggests that access to physical and human capital, in the way of finance and education respectively, are key factors in increasing one’s probability of migrating. This paper attempts to extend this literature by directly measuring the extent to which social capital, broadly defined as one’s access to a migrant network, affects the probability of rural-to-urban migration. Using the first nationally representative panel dataset in South Africa, the National Income Dynamics Study, and defining a rural-to-urban migrant as an individual who is observed moving from a rural area in the baseline wave (2008) to an urban area by Wave 3 (2012), I estimate a standard model of migration choice with the inclusion of one’s connection to a migrant network. This connection is measured by being part of a household in the baseline wave that contains somebody with current or recent experience as a labour migrant. In line with international migration literature, the empirical results suggest that access to a migrant network increases the likelihood of becoming a migrant (by between 2-3 percentage points). These findings are robust to the inclusion of the individual’s prior migration experience and employment status. Furthermore, an extension of the core analysis to assess the impact of genetic relatedness in conjunction with the migrant network effect suggests some evidence of a household bargaining process at play. The findings in this paper therefore suggest that social capital does indeed play a role along with physical and human capital in determining who migrates in South Africa. 2015-08-15T05:29:45Z 2015-08-15T05:29:45Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13747 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Economics
Stapleton, Caroline
The migrant network effect : an empirical analysis of rural-to-urban migration in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The migrant network effect : an empirical analysis of rural-to-urban migration in South Africa
title_full The migrant network effect : an empirical analysis of rural-to-urban migration in South Africa
title_fullStr The migrant network effect : an empirical analysis of rural-to-urban migration in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The migrant network effect : an empirical analysis of rural-to-urban migration in South Africa
title_short The migrant network effect : an empirical analysis of rural-to-urban migration in South Africa
title_sort migrant network effect an empirical analysis of rural to urban migration in south africa
topic Economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13747
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AT stapletoncaroline migrantnetworkeffectanempiricalanalysisofruraltourbanmigrationinsouthafrica