Int Migr Rev, 1985;19(2):239-50.
PMID: 12280256

Abstract

"This article describes characteristics of prospective migrants in the Malaysian Family Life Survey and investigates how planning to move affects hours of work. [The authors] use ideas about intertemporal substitution...to discuss the response to temporary and permanent wage expectations on the part of potential migrants. [An] econometric section presents reduced-form estimates for wage rates and planned migration equations and two-stage least squares estimates for hours of work. Men currently planning a move were found to work fewer hours. Those originally planning only a temporary stay at their current location work more hours."

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.