2019
DOI: 10.3390/su11061650
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A Study of the Socioeconomic Factors Influencing Migration in Russia

Abstract: Russia has experienced population decline in years and the economic development in Russia is largely restricted by labor shortage, particularly for the Far North and East region. In order to explore the migration mechanisms, six socioeconomic factors were selected to explore the influences on the net migration. Data from the 82 regions covering four time periods (2000, 2005, 2010 and 2015) was processed use spatial panel econometric analysis and the time-period fixed effects Spatial Durbin Model (SDM) was sele… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Russian and foreign researchers studied the issues of the impact of negative processes in the regional economy on the demographic sphere. Using data on 82 regions of Russia for 2000-2015, Wang et al (2019) show that a decrease in the gross regional product per capita and an increase in unemployment are closely related to the regions' migration outflow. Batunova & Perucca (2020) have analyzed the relationship between demographic and economic development, using indicators for Russia's 78 regions for 1998-2012.…”
Section: Problem Statementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Russian and foreign researchers studied the issues of the impact of negative processes in the regional economy on the demographic sphere. Using data on 82 regions of Russia for 2000-2015, Wang et al (2019) show that a decrease in the gross regional product per capita and an increase in unemployment are closely related to the regions' migration outflow. Batunova & Perucca (2020) have analyzed the relationship between demographic and economic development, using indicators for Russia's 78 regions for 1998-2012.…”
Section: Problem Statementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although historically climate has motivated internal migration in Russia (Vakulenko, 2019), warming temperatures may not serve as pull factors to Russia's east and north, given limitations in urban development, transportation infrastructure, and soil quality, distance from Moscow and western Russia, and ineffective financial and policy inducements (Parfenova et al, 2019; Streletskiy et al, 2019; Wang et al, 2019), as well as the still colder‐than‐average climate. Except for Yamalo‐Nenets Autonomous Okrug and Krasnoyarsk Krai, most Arctic regions are experiencing outmigration unlinked to climate change (Katsova, 2022; Khoreva et al, 2018).…”
Section: Climate Change Impactsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These factors make the work related to the development of the resource potential of the Arctic and its territories unattractive to the working population. At the moment, there is an acute personnel problem in the field of mineral resource extraction in the Arctic [38] (p. 1). As the analysis below shows, the Russian Arctic was characterized by an outflow of human resources at the time of this research.…”
Section: Resource Potential Development and Labor Migrationmentioning
confidence: 99%