Push Factors of Population Migration in Russian Regions in Terms of Age Structure

Migration is a major component of population dynamics including its composition. In entire macroregions of Russia, it has a greater impact on the demographic situation than the birth rate. In order to manage migration processes, it is necessary to understand the reasons that push certain population...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Evgeniya Mikhailovna Moiseeva
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Economic Research Institute of the Far East Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2025-06-01
Series:Prostranstvennaâ Èkonomika
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.spatial-economics.com/images/spatial-econimics/2025_2/SE.2025.2.114-137.Moiseeva.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849706707080445952
author Evgeniya Mikhailovna Moiseeva
author_facet Evgeniya Mikhailovna Moiseeva
author_sort Evgeniya Mikhailovna Moiseeva
collection DOAJ
description Migration is a major component of population dynamics including its composition. In entire macroregions of Russia, it has a greater impact on the demographic situation than the birth rate. In order to manage migration processes, it is necessary to understand the reasons that push certain population groups to change their place of residence. This article is devoted to the analysis of the so-called ?push factors? of migration using econometric methods. Namely, regression models are estimated on panel data for 85 constituent entities of the Russian Federation for the five-year period from 2019 to 2023. In particular, the hypothesis is tested that the same socio-economic and demographic characteristics of a region have different significance for population outflow depending on age, so the models are built separately for each of the five-year age groups from 0–4 to 80 years and older. The main conclusions are as follows. The relationship between the age structure and the intensity of migration is two-way. The population aged 30–40 years responds most rationally to the socio-economic situation in the region. Economic factors are most important for young people who are starting their professional careers and remain important for the middle-aged population. Low competition in the labor market is not attractive to young people, but it is a deterrent to the departure of older age groups. Cramped housing conditions push the population of all ages to migrate, but are most important for young people, who, however, are not yet able to make effective demand for real estate, so the high cost of housing does not act as a significant pushing factor for them. The state of the healthcare sector is of greater interest to the mature population. Opportunities to obtain an education largely determine migration at the ages of 15–19. Opportunities for cultural leisure reduce migration only among pensioners, while the development of transport infrastructure and especially the availability of good access to the Internet act as a deterrent for everyone. Among environmental indicators, families with children are the most sensitive to pollution levels, and harsh climate is a highly significant pushing factor at all ages but is most significant for pensioners
format Article
id doaj-art-ebebf23d57584b878d89627a7a7199a5
institution DOAJ
issn 1815-9834
2587-5957
language Russian
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Economic Research Institute of the Far East Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
record_format Article
series Prostranstvennaâ Èkonomika
spelling doaj-art-ebebf23d57584b878d89627a7a7199a52025-08-20T03:16:07ZrusEconomic Research Institute of the Far East Branch of the Russian Academy of SciencesProstranstvennaâ Èkonomika1815-98342587-59572025-06-0121211413710.14530/se.2025.2.114-137Push Factors of Population Migration in Russian Regions in Terms of Age StructureEvgeniya Mikhailovna Moiseeva0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7571-2369Institute for Demographic Research FCTAS RASMigration is a major component of population dynamics including its composition. In entire macroregions of Russia, it has a greater impact on the demographic situation than the birth rate. In order to manage migration processes, it is necessary to understand the reasons that push certain population groups to change their place of residence. This article is devoted to the analysis of the so-called ?push factors? of migration using econometric methods. Namely, regression models are estimated on panel data for 85 constituent entities of the Russian Federation for the five-year period from 2019 to 2023. In particular, the hypothesis is tested that the same socio-economic and demographic characteristics of a region have different significance for population outflow depending on age, so the models are built separately for each of the five-year age groups from 0–4 to 80 years and older. The main conclusions are as follows. The relationship between the age structure and the intensity of migration is two-way. The population aged 30–40 years responds most rationally to the socio-economic situation in the region. Economic factors are most important for young people who are starting their professional careers and remain important for the middle-aged population. Low competition in the labor market is not attractive to young people, but it is a deterrent to the departure of older age groups. Cramped housing conditions push the population of all ages to migrate, but are most important for young people, who, however, are not yet able to make effective demand for real estate, so the high cost of housing does not act as a significant pushing factor for them. The state of the healthcare sector is of greater interest to the mature population. Opportunities to obtain an education largely determine migration at the ages of 15–19. Opportunities for cultural leisure reduce migration only among pensioners, while the development of transport infrastructure and especially the availability of good access to the Internet act as a deterrent for everyone. Among environmental indicators, families with children are the most sensitive to pollution levels, and harsh climate is a highly significant pushing factor at all ages but is most significant for pensionershttp://www.spatial-economics.com/images/spatial-econimics/2025_2/SE.2025.2.114-137.Moiseeva.pdfpopulation migrationfactors of migrationpopulation age structuresocio-economic situationregions of russiaregional developmentregression analysis
spellingShingle Evgeniya Mikhailovna Moiseeva
Push Factors of Population Migration in Russian Regions in Terms of Age Structure
Prostranstvennaâ Èkonomika
population migration
factors of migration
population age structure
socio-economic situation
regions of russia
regional development
regression analysis
title Push Factors of Population Migration in Russian Regions in Terms of Age Structure
title_full Push Factors of Population Migration in Russian Regions in Terms of Age Structure
title_fullStr Push Factors of Population Migration in Russian Regions in Terms of Age Structure
title_full_unstemmed Push Factors of Population Migration in Russian Regions in Terms of Age Structure
title_short Push Factors of Population Migration in Russian Regions in Terms of Age Structure
title_sort push factors of population migration in russian regions in terms of age structure
topic population migration
factors of migration
population age structure
socio-economic situation
regions of russia
regional development
regression analysis
url http://www.spatial-economics.com/images/spatial-econimics/2025_2/SE.2025.2.114-137.Moiseeva.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT evgeniyamikhailovnamoiseeva pushfactorsofpopulationmigrationinrussianregionsintermsofagestructure