Type | Working Paper |
Title | An Empirical Analysis of the Effects of State Fiscal Policy on Retirement Migration |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2002 |
URL | http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.498.485&rep=rep1&type=pdf |
Abstract | This paper develops a state choice model and estimates it using the 1990 census in order to determine if state and local governments can attract retirees to their states using fiscal policy. In order to control for the sunbelt-state effects, a nested logit structure which is less restrictive than the multinomial logit model is embedded in the model. The empirical results show that the nested logit model catches a significant role of state fiscal policy on retirement migration. More specifically, they reveal that the young old of age 60 to 65 are significantly influenced by income tax and property tax, and the normal old of age 66 to 75 are affected by death tax, as well as income tax and property tax. In addition, the migration decision of healthy retirees turns out to be significantly influenced by fiscal policy whereas the migration decision of unhealthy retirees is not. A specification test of the state choice model rejects the competing multinomial logit specification. The estimated model predicts that the average migration rate will be close to the observed migration rates, but over-predicts return migration because of the presence of high birthplace attachment |
» | United States - Census of Population and Housing 1990 - IPUMS Subset |