Winters of discontent
研究短期降雪如何影响美国五大湖地区县级净迁移率,发现高于平均水平的降雪导致次年净人口减少,且该效应仅出现在湖效应降雪区域,对年轻和中年人群影响最大。
Do short-run weather shocks affect migration? I estimate how snow influences county-level migration in the Great Lakes region since 1970. I isolate responses to snow by comparing its effect on net migration across regions exposed to lake-effect snow (LES)—heavy snow generated downwind of the Great Lakes. Higher-than-average snowfall in lake-effect regions leads to net population loss the following year. This effect is driven by reductions in in-migrants, dissipates after 1–2 years, and is strongest for young and middle-aged populations. Snow has virtually no effect on migration in non-lake-effect regions, suggesting that baseline exposure interacts with anomalous weather events. • Above-normal snowfall reduces net migration in lake-effect snow counties in the Great Lakes region but not in other counties. • The migration response to snow in lake-effect counties is driven by reductions in in-migration. • Snow effects are largest for young and middle-aged adults and dissipate within one to two years.