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2016 Planning Commission Packets
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As we have seen, the likelihood of moving across state lines peaks in the late teens and early 20s, and then <br />tapers gradually into older adulthood. However, after accounting for all movement in and out, we find <br />Figure 13: Age Groups With Net Losses From Migration To <br />Other States, By Average Annual Number Of People Lost, <br />Minnesota, 2008-2012 <br />-3,600 18 <br />-3,000 19 <br />-2,600 20-24 us <br />-1,500 35-39 <br />-1,400 60-64 <br />-900 65-69 <br />Sowee: IPUMS version of LLS. Census Bureau's 2008-2012 American Co,nmunIq Survey. Tabulations by MN <br />sere Demographic Cenver. <br />The Great Migration Of College Students <br />statistically significant net losses of residents <br />to domestic migration among three segments <br />of Minnesotans: those age 18-24 (about 9,300 <br />lost annually), age 35-39 (about 1,500 lost <br />annually), and age 60-69 (about 2,200 lost <br />annually) (see Figure 13). Over the past five <br />years then, these losses sum to more than <br />65,000 Minnesotans who have out -migrated <br />in these few age groups. If we are to focus <br />our attention most precisely, the greatest <br />losses occur among Minnesota's 18- and 19- <br />year-olds—more than 3,000 apiece each <br />year, or half of the total annual net domestic <br />loss that Minnesota experiences all together. <br />Among 18- and 19 -year-olds, MN has lost a <br />net of more than 33,000 people in the past <br />five years. Many, but not all of these migrants, <br />are college -bound. <br />Of all the people migrating in and out of Minnesota in any given year, a large segment is made up of students <br />moving to attend college or graduate school (see Figures 14 and 15). About one-fifth of Minnesota's new arrivals <br />and one-fourth of our new leavers are students of higher education. While our data source, the American <br />Community Survey, does not directly ask respondents why they moved to another state, we can estimate <br />students by identifying those who moved in the past year and are currently enrolled in post -secondary school. 10 <br />Figure 14: Annual Leavers From Minnesota, By Age Group And Student Status, 2008-2012 <br />25,000 <br />20,000 <br />15,000 <br />10,000 ■ Undergrad or Graduate Student <br />5,000 p �ps • Not a Student <br />)s 4 \h \q tip ryA 'yA ,hF A9 yA hq P p9 '�A 'D P ya <br />4V 1.64 10` ^s,,41 O <br />AGE <br />Somze: IPUMS version of U.S. Census Bureau's 2008-2012 Amerlan Community Survey. Tabuiazions by MN Save Demogrephic Center. <br />to "Students' were identified in the data as those who began attending school within the year following their move, who are under age 50. These <br />individuals are presumed to have moved for the purpose of attending higher education. <br />UP <br />Page 114nnes 1 MN STATE DEMOGRAPHIC CENTER JANUARY 2015 <br />
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