Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Local house price effects of internal migration in Queensland: Australia's new interstate migration capital
This paper examines the causal impact of internal migration on house price changes in Queensland - Australia's new capital of interstate migration. We study annual housing price growth across 82 Statistical Areas Level 3 (SA3) regions between 2014 and 2019 by employing a spatial correlation approach. We also estimate the impact of the increasing share of migrants from New South Wales on the local housing markets in Queensland. The main findings are summarised as follows: (1) an annual increase in the inflow of migrants equal to 1% of a region's initial population leads to a 0.6-0.7% annual increase in Queensland's house prices across different empirical specifications; (2) internal migration inflow increases house prices in Greater Brisbane metropolitan area, whereas internal migration has a negative impact on housing price changes in the Rest of State regions; (3) migrants tend to move towards SA3 regions where house prices grow more slowly conditional on the local area controls and the time fixed effects; (4) the increasing share of migration from New South Wales does not have a significant effect on house price growth in Queensland. Our findings have important policy implications related to sustainable local economic development since sustainable development is, for the most part, achieved by attracting newcomers to the cities/towns and completed through the involvement of migrants in local housing and labour markets.
Local house price effects of internal migration in Queensland: Australia's new interstate migration capital
This paper examines the causal impact of internal migration on house price changes in Queensland - Australia's new capital of interstate migration. We study annual housing price growth across 82 Statistical Areas Level 3 (SA3) regions between 2014 and 2019 by employing a spatial correlation approach. We also estimate the impact of the increasing share of migrants from New South Wales on the local housing markets in Queensland. The main findings are summarised as follows: (1) an annual increase in the inflow of migrants equal to 1% of a region's initial population leads to a 0.6-0.7% annual increase in Queensland's house prices across different empirical specifications; (2) internal migration inflow increases house prices in Greater Brisbane metropolitan area, whereas internal migration has a negative impact on housing price changes in the Rest of State regions; (3) migrants tend to move towards SA3 regions where house prices grow more slowly conditional on the local area controls and the time fixed effects; (4) the increasing share of migration from New South Wales does not have a significant effect on house price growth in Queensland. Our findings have important policy implications related to sustainable local economic development since sustainable development is, for the most part, achieved by attracting newcomers to the cities/towns and completed through the involvement of migrants in local housing and labour markets.
Local house price effects of internal migration in Queensland: Australia's new interstate migration capital
Erol, Isil (Autor:in) / Unal, Umut (Autor:in)
01.01.2021
RePEc:mar:MAGKSE:202124
Paper
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
ddc:330 , R31 , Internal Migration , Australia , Shift-share instrument , R12 , R23 , Housing prices , Queensland
Interstate migration of college freshmen
Online Contents | 2003
|Determinants of interstate migration, by race, 1965–1970
Online Contents | 1973
|The effect of automation levels on US interstate migration
Online Contents | 2019
|Personal and Location-Specific Characteristics and Elderly Interstate Migration
Online Contents | 1996
|