May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series 1 “Recent years have completed the long-term rever- sal of blacks’ historic out- migration from the South.” Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy ■ The South scored net gains of black migrants from all three of the other regions of the U.S. during the late 1990s, reversing a 35-year trend. Of the 10 states that suffered the greatest net loss of blacks between 1965 and 1970, five ranked among the top 10 states for attracting blacks between 1995 and 2000. ■ Southern metropolitan areas, partic- ularly Atlanta, led the way in attract- ing black migrants in the late 1990s. In contrast, the major metropolitan areas of New York, Chicago, Los Ange- les, and San Francisco experienced the greatest out-migration of blacks during the same period. ■ Among migrants from the Northeast, Midwest, and West regions, blacks were more likely than whites to select destinations in the South. Atlanta and Washington, D.C. were the top destinations for black migrants from all three regions; white migrants moved to a broader set of areas includ- ing Miami, Phoenix, and Los Angeles. ■ College-educated individuals lead the new migration into the South. The “brain gain” states of Georgia, Texas, and Maryland attracted the most black college graduates from 1995 to 2000, while New York suffered the largest net loss. ■ After several decades as a major black migrant “magnet,” California lost more black migrants than it gained during the late 1990s. Southern states, along with western “spillover” states like Arizona and Nevada, received the largest numbers of black out-migrants from California. This full-scale reversal of blacks’ “Great Migration” north during the early part of the 20th century reflects the South’s economic growth and modernization, its improved race rela- tions, and the longstanding cultural and kinship ties it holds for black families. This new pattern has augmented a sizeable and growing black middle class in the South’s major met- ropolitan areas. Findings An analysis of migration data from the past four decennial censuses at regional, state, and metropolitan-area levels indicates that: The New Great Migration: Black Americans’ Return to the South, 1965–2000 William H. Frey
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May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series 1
“Recent years have
completed the
long-term rever-
sal of blacks’
historic out-
migration from
the South.”
Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy
■ The South scored net gains of blackmigrants from all three of the otherregions of the U.S. during the late1990s, reversing a 35-year trend. Ofthe 10 states that suffered the greatestnet loss of blacks between 1965 and1970, five ranked among the top 10states for attracting blacks between1995 and 2000.
■ Southern metropolitan areas, partic-ularly Atlanta, led the way in attract-ing black migrants in the late 1990s.In contrast, the major metropolitanareas of New York, Chicago, Los Ange-les, and San Francisco experienced thegreatest out-migration of blacks duringthe same period.
■ Among migrants from the Northeast,Midwest, and West regions, blackswere more likely than whites toselect destinations in the South.
Atlanta and Washington, D.C. werethe top destinations for black migrantsfrom all three regions; white migrantsmoved to a broader set of areas includ-ing Miami, Phoenix, and Los Angeles.
■ College-educated individuals leadthe new migration into the South.The “brain gain” states of Georgia,Texas, and Maryland attracted themost black college graduates from1995 to 2000, while New York sufferedthe largest net loss.
■ After several decades as a majorblack migrant “magnet,” Californialost more black migrants than itgained during the late 1990s.Southern states, along with western“spillover” states like Arizona andNevada, received the largest numbersof black out-migrants from California.
This full-scale reversal of blacks’ “Great Migration” north during the early part of the 20thcentury reflects the South’s economic growth and modernization, its improved race rela-tions, and the longstanding cultural and kinship ties it holds for black families. This newpattern has augmented a sizeable and growing black middle class in the South’s major met-ropolitan areas.
FindingsAn analysis of migration data from the past four decennial censuses at regional, state, andmetropolitan-area levels indicates that:
The New Great Migration: Black Americans’ Return to the South,1965–2000William H. Frey
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
Introduction
During the early part of the20th century, black Ameri-cans left the AmericanSouth in large numbers.
Several factors precipitated their“Great Migration” to northern cities.1
First, the mechanization of southernagriculture rendered many farm work-ers, including blacks, redundant. Sec-ond, the industrialization of theNortheast and Midwest created mil-lions of manufacturing jobs forunskilled workers. And not least inimportance, the generally oppressiveracial climate in the South acted as a“push” factor for many decades asblacks sought out more tolerant com-munities in other regions. Even aswhites migrated to the Sunbelt in largenumbers at mid-century, black migra-tion out of the South exceeded blackin-migration as late as the period1965–70.
Now, census migration data confirmthat over the past three decades, theSouth has developed into a regionalmagnet for blacks, more so than forwhites or the population as a whole.This renewed appeal to blacks, espe-cially those with higher education lev-els and from all other parts of thecountry, provides additional evidencethat the region’s economic, amenity,and cultural “pull” factors now out-weigh the “push” factors that predomi-nated in past decades.
This survey begins by examining theSouth’s exchange of black migrantswith other regions over the past fourdecennial censuses (1970, 1980,1990, and 2000). It identifies shifts inthe states and metropolitan areas overthat period that gained and lost themost black residents due to internal(U.S. domestic) migration. Next, thesurvey compares the rates at whichblack and white movers selectedsouthern destinations in the late1990s, and looks at the educationalattainment levels of those movers andthe places experiencing the largest
“brain gains” and “brain drains” of col-lege graduates. Finally, the studyexamines California’s reversal from amajor recipient of black migrants fromthe South to a major “donor” state atthe end of the century.
Methodology
Geographical DefinitionsThis study focuses on migration trendsfor U.S. regions, states, and metropoli-tan areas in different parts of theanalysis. The four regions—Northeast,Midwest, South, and West—follow thedefinitions employed by the U.S. Cen-sus Bureau.2 The metropolitan typesanalyzed include consolidated metro-politan statistical areas (CMSAs), met-ropolitan statistical areas (MSAs), andNew England county metropolitanareas (NECMAs) in the New Englandstates, as defined by the U.S. Office ofManagement and Budget in 1999 andin effect for Census 2000.3
This study differs from some otheranalyses in Brookings’ Living CitiesCensus Series in its use of CMSAsrather than their component parts, pri-mary metropolitan statistical areas(PMSAs). CMSAs are metropolitanareas of 1 million or more people thatare subdivided into two or morePMSAs. For example, four PMSAsexist within the Los Angeles–River-side–Orange County CMSA: the LosAngeles–Long Beach, CA, PMSA(consisting of Los Angeles County);the Orange County, CA, PMSA (con-sisting of Orange County); the River-side–San Bernardino, CA, PMSA(consisting of Riverside and SanBernardino counties); and the Ven-tura, CA, PMSA (consisting of Ven-tura County). This study uses CMSAsrather than PMSAs to reflect howmigration patterns affect broad metro-politan regions, and to ensure thatestimates of domestic migration cap-ture geographically significant changesin residence, rather than movesbetween two jurisdictions within thesame region.
DataThe migration data analyzed in thisstudy draw from the decennial censusquestion, “Where did this person livefive years ago?” Using the answers tothis question, the study analyzesmigration trends over the 1995 to2000 period from Census 2000, andfor the 1985 to 1990, 1975 to 1980,and 1965 to 1970 periods from thelast three decennial censuses. Netmigration for a state or region isdefined as the difference between thenumber of in-migrants to that areafrom elsewhere in the U.S., minus thenumber of out-migrants from that areato other parts of the U.S., for movesthat took place over the five-yearperiod. This survey focuses solely ondomestic migration, or movementwithin the 50 states (plus the Districtof Columbia), and thus does not takeinto account movement into the U.S.from abroad, or out-migration to othercountries.
The migration data used in theseanalyses draw primarily from the full“long form” sample of responses fromthe decennial censuses of 1970–2000.The data are based on an approximate16 percent sample of all respondentsin these censuses, and are statisticallyweighted to represent 100 percent ofthe population. This study’s analysesof metropolitan migration amongblack and white sub-populations, andby educational attainment, are basedon weighted tabulations of 1995–2000migration data from Census 2000 5-Percent Public Use Microdata Sample(PUMS) files.4 As discussed here, theterm “blacks” refers to both Hispanicand non-Hispanic blacks in all censusyears. In 2000, blacks include thosewho identify black race alone, andwhites include those who identifywhite race alone and non-Hispanicethnicity.
2
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
Findings
A. The South scored net gains ofblack migrants from all three of theother regions of the U.S. during thelate 1990s, reversing a 35-yeartrend.The 1995–2000 period completed along-term reversal of the black popula-tion’s historic out-migration from theSouth.
Last observed in 1965–70 at the tailend of the “Great Migration,” the his-toric pattern featured a considerablenet exodus of blacks from the South,as each of the three other regions ofthe U.S. gained black migrants (Figure1 and Appendix A). In fact, during thelate 1960s, the 14 states experiencingthe greatest black out-migration wereall located in the South, led by the
3
Figure 1. Black Net Migration, U.S. Regions, 1965–2000
Table 1. Black Net Migration, States with Largest Gains and Losses, 1965–2000
Rank 1965–70 Period 1975–80 Period 1985–90 Period 1995–2000 Period
Largest Gains
1 California 91,425 California 75,746 Georgia 80,827 Georgia 129,749
2 Michigan 63,839 Maryland 54,793 Maryland 59,966 North Carolina 53,371
8 Tennessee -17,703 Arkansas -9,236 New Jersey -10,084 Michigan -16,449
9 District of Columbia -15,390 Alabama -7,843 Arkansas -8,931 Hawaii -7,203
10 Virginia -11,586 New Jersey -6,462 Alabama -8,332 Massachusetts -6,538
Source: Author’s analysis of 1970, 1980, 1990, and 2000 decennial censuses
-400,000
-300,000
-200,000
-100,000
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
1995–20001985–901975–801965–70
WestMidwestNortheastSouth
Source: Author’s analysis of 1970, 1980, 1990 and 2000 decennial censuses.
“Deep South” states of Mississippi,Alabama, and Louisiana (Table 1 andAppendix B). Meanwhile, the stateswith the greatest black migration gainsduring that period included those inthe industrial Midwest and Northeast,as well as California. These states con-tained urban industrial centers that, atthe time, attracted large numbers ofless-skilled black laborers in search ofemployment.
This pattern began to shift in thelate 1970s, as industrial states—espe-cially in the Northeast—deindustrial-ization caused significant employmentdeclines, and southern employmentprospects improved.5 The South actu-ally showed net gains of blackmigrants, while the Northeast andMidwest experienced net losses.Trends at the state level reflected thisshift, as now New York, Illinois, Penn-sylvania, and Ohio ranked amongthose with the largest net black out-migration. Meanwhile, new stateswere gaining blacks. Between 1975and 1980, for example, no less thanseven southern states ranked amongthe top 10 black migration gainers,whereas the 1965–1970 period sawonly one “border” southern state(Maryland) among the top 10 blackmigration gainers.
Black out-migration from theNortheast and Midwest and into theSouth continued in the late 1980s.Notably, California dropped from firstto sixth among the states with thelargest net gains of black migrants,surpassed by the southeastern states ofGeorgia, Maryland, Florida, Virginia,and North Carolina.
By 1995 to 2000, the dominantblack migration pattern was a full-scale reversal of the 1965–70 (andearlier) pattern. For the first time, theWest region, as well as the Northeastand Midwest, contributed larger num-bers of black migrants to the Souththan they received in return. Thus, thepositive contributions of black gainsfrom the West, coupled with greater
gains from
the Northeast and Midwest, meantthat the contribution of migration tothe South’s black population nearlydoubled that from the late 1980s.6
Among states in the late 1990s, Cal-ifornia not only lost its status as one ofthe top black net migration gainers,but it became the second-largest loserof black migrants. Georgia, mean-while, far surpassed all other states inits net gains of black migrants. Thatand other “New South” states thatnow receive the most blacks (includingNorth Carolina, Florida, Maryland,Virginia, and Tennessee) overlap onlypartially with the “Deep South” statesthat served as major donors of blackout-migrants in the late 1960s (Figure2).7 These southeastern states, as wellas Texas, are locations for high-techdevelopment, knowledge-based indus-tries, recreation, and new urban andsuburban communities. They areincreasingly attractive to youngerblacks as well as older “empty-nest”and retiree blacks who have longstand-ing ties to the region.
Clearly, the continued economicdynamism of the South, coupled withits much improved racial climate, rep-resents a far different context for new
generations of black migrants than theregion their counterparts vacated inlarge numbers over 30 years ago.
B. Southern metropolitan areas, par-ticularly Atlanta, led the way inattracting black migrants in the late1990s.The 35-year pattern of black move-ment back to the South also surfacesin an examination of the metropolitanareas that attracted—and lost—themost blacks over the 1965–2000period.
At the metropolitan level, dramaticchanges in both the 1970s and 1980scharacterize the reversal of the “GreatMigration.” The list of metro areasthat experienced the largest net lossesof black migrants changed mostabruptly between the late 1960s andlate 1970s (Table 2 and Appendix C).With the exception of Pittsburgh, the10 largest net losses at the metropoli-tan level between 1965 and 1970occurred in the South, and mostly inDeep South areas, including threeeach in Alabama (Birmingham,Mobile, and Montgomery) andLouisiana (New Orleans, Lafayette,and Shreveport). But in the late
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series 4
Figure 2. Top 10 States for Black Net Migration Gains,1965–1970 and 1995–2000*
Top Ten Gaining States, 1965–1970Top Ten Gaining States, 1995–2000Other States
Source: Author’s analysis of 1970 and 2000 decennial census data.
*Maryland was among the top 10 states in both 1965–1970 and 1995–2000.
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
1970s, industrial shake-outs in theNortheast and Midwest fueled a newmigration of blacks out of several met-ropolitan areas that were their majordestinations in earlier decades. NewYork and Chicago led the new declin-ers, beginning a pattern of losses thatcontinues to the present. In fact, onlyNew Orleans—a metro that continuesto lose black migrants today—repre-sents the South on the “bottom 10”list in the late 1970s.
Among the metropolitan areas thatmade the largest net gains from blackmigration, the pattern altered mostradically in the late 1980s. In the late1970s, the top destinations for blacksincluded three areas each in Californiaand Texas. By the late 1980s, however,the top four gains accrued to metroareas in the southeastern U.S., and
the large California metropolises ofLos Angeles and San Francisco experi-enced black migration losses. Indeed,the presence of the three non-south-ern metropolitan areas among the top10 (San Diego, Minneapolis-St. Paul,and Sacramento) is explained in partby large migration flows out of theirlarger nearby areas (Los Angeles,Chicago, and San Francisco).
The 1995–2000 period solidifiedsouthern metropolitan areas’ domi-nance as magnets for black migrants,at the same time that the nation’slargest northern and western metropo-lises assumed the lead in the net out-migration of the black population.Atlanta was far and away the largestmigration magnet for blacks, with netmigration nearly triple that of the sec-ond ranking area (Dallas). Charlotte,
Memphis, and Columbia join othersoutheastern metro areas on the list inthe late 1990s. Only Las Vegas, catch-ing some “spillover” from California,represents the non-South.
Meanwhile, those areas witnessingthe largest black net out-migration inthe late 1990s reflect a familiar mix ofnon-southern areas (New Orleansexcepted), led by New York andChicago. The fact that Los Angelesand San Francisco now rank third andfourth, with San Diego following closebehind (seventh), underscores thechanging role of California from amajor black migration destination to amajor migration origin.
Of the 40 metropolitan areas gain-ing the largest number of blackmigrants (on net) in each of four peri-ods, only 10 were located in the South
5
Table 2. Black Net Migration, Metropolitan Areas with Largest Gains and Losses, 1965–2000*
Rank 1965–70 Period 1975–80 Period 1985–90 Period 1995–2000 Period
Largest Gains
1 Los Angeles 55,943 Los Angeles 32,764 Atlanta 74,705 Atlanta 114,478
2 Detroit 54,766 Atlanta 27,111 Washington-Baltimore 29,904 Dallas 39,360
3 Washington-Baltimore 34,365 Houston 24,267 Norfolk-Virginia Beach 27,645 Charlotte 23,313
4 San Francisco 24,699 San Francisco 16,034 Raleigh-Durham 17,611 Orlando 20,222
5 Philadelphia 24,601 San Diego 15,621 Dallas 16,097 Las Vegas 18,912
6 New York 18,792 Dallas 12,460 Orlando 13,368 Norfolk-Virginia Beach 16,660
10 Shreveport -4,047 Kansas City -2,795 Pittsburgh -4,987 Boston -7,018
Source: Author’s analysis of 1970, 1980, 1990, and 2000 decennial censuses
* Metro areas are CMSAs, MSAs, and (in New England) NECMAs, as defined in Census 2000. Names are abbreviated.
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
in 1965–70, compared to 22 in1975–80, 26 in 1985–90, and fully 33in 1995–2000. A strong economic“push” from northern metro areas,associated with the 1970s deindustri-alization, marked the beginning of theblack population’s return to the South.In more recent years, the increasing“pull” of economically vibrant and cul-turally familiar New South metropoli-tan areas—especially those in theSoutheast—accentuated the prevailingpattern.
C. Among migrants from the North-east, Midwest, and West regions,blacks were more likely than whitesto select destinations in the South. The strong historical ties betweenblacks and the South, along with criti-cal mass of black professionals thatreside in and around many southerncities, are among several factors thatmay make black migrants from else-where in the U.S. more likely thantheir white counterparts to selectsouthern locations.
The destinations of whites andblacks who relocated across regions inthe late 1990s reveal a stronger prefer-ence among black migrants for south-ern destinations. This pattern isevident for migrants leaving eachregion, especially the Northeast.Among black and white migrantsresiding in the Northeast in 1995, 85percent of blacks headed South (asopposed to the Midwest or West),compared to only 64 percent of whites(Figure 3). In the West and Midwest,too, the share of black out-migrantsmoving to the South exceeded thecomparable white out-migrant shareby about 20 percentage points.
The top metropolitan destinationsfor migrants from outside the Southfrom 1995–2000 also reflect this dif-ference between whites and blacks(Table 3). From the Northeast, bothblacks and whites preferred southerndestinations, though white destina-tions tilted a little more heavily towardsouth Florida retirement locations. In
6
Figure 3. Regional Destinations for Out-Migrants,Blacks versus Whites, 1995–2000
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
WestMidwestSouth
WhitesBlacks
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
WestNortheastSouth
WhitesBlacks
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
MidwestNorhteastSouth
WhitesBlacks
7.4
8.0
84.5
21.7
14.7
63.6
FROM NORTHEAST
Perc
enta
ge S
elec
ting
Des
tinat
ion
Reg
ion
16.5
7.3
76.2
32.5
11.0
56.5
FROM MIDWEST
Perc
enta
ge S
elec
ting
Des
tinat
ion
Reg
ion
20.3
8.6
71.1
32.9
15.6
51.5
FROM WEST
Perc
enta
ge S
elec
ting
Des
tinat
ion
Reg
ion
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
addition, Los Angeles ranked amongthe top destinations for whites. Blackand white migration patterns wereeven more distinct for migrants fromthe Midwest. The top three destina-tions for blacks were all in the South(Atlanta, Washington, and Dallas),while the top three destinations forwhites were all western (Phoenix, LosAngeles, and Denver).
Among those leaving the West inthe late 1990s, differences amongblacks and whites were somewhatmore muted, as the groups shared fourof the top five metropolitan destina-tions. Still, there remained one con-stant across regions for blackmigrants: Atlanta and Washington,D.C. ranked as the top magnets. Bycontrast, Atlanta was not among thetop five destinations for whites from
the Northeast, Midwest, or West. Thisunderscores the importance of thesetwo metropolitan areas, especiallyAtlanta, as premier destinations forblacks migrants from across thenation.
D. College-educated individuals leadthe new migration into the South.The northward migration of blacksover much of the 20th century did notskew high on socioeconomic attrib-utes. Generally, South-to-North blackmigrants were less educated than theirnorthern counterparts.8 This largelyreflected the “push” of eroding agricul-tural job prospects in the oppressivesouthern racial climate, as well asheavy demand for manual labor innorthern industrial states.
The new migration of blacks into
the South turns this historical trendon its head. Now, more educatedblacks are migrating to Southern desti-nations at higher rates than those withlower education levels. Figure 4reflects this pattern, showing net ratesof black migration per 1,000 blackadult residents at each educationlevel.9 The rates are positive for everylevel of education, indicating that theSouth gained both less-educated andmore-educated blacks through migra-tion in the late 1990s. Notably,though, the net rates are highest forthose with college degrees and thosewith at least some college. Thus, blackmigration to the South over this periodtended to raise the overall educationalattainment level of southern blacks.
This selective migration of “the bestand the brightest” is consistent withconventional wisdom on inter-regionaland interstate migrant flow across anational job market.10 The pattern ismirrored in white migration to theSouth during the same period. As withthe black population, the South gainedwhites at all education levels, thoughnet gains were larger for higher-edu-cated whites.
State-level analysis provides abroader picture of “brain gain” and“brain drain” patterns for college grad-uate blacks. Table 4 shows net migra-tion gains and losses for adult collegegraduates by state over the 1995–2000period. Only 16 states show net gainsfor black college graduates. Georgia,Texas, and Maryland lead all others,and four other southeastern statesrank among the top 10 recipients. Ari-zona and Nevada, drawing some gainsfrom California’s out-flow, stand out astwo migrant gainers in the West.Beyond these, the remaining statesexperiencing in-migration of blackswith college degrees attracted rela-tively small numbers of these individu-als
The major black “brain gain” statesare distinct from those gaining themost white college graduates.Although Southern states such as
7
Table 3. Top Metropolitan Destinations, Black and WhiteMigrants from Non-South Regions, 1995–2000*
* Metro areas are CMSAs, MSAs, and (in New England) NECMAs, as defined in Census 2000.
Names are abbreviated.
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
Florida, North Carolina, Georgia, andTexas are among the largest whitegainers, the top 10 list also includessix western states. Comparatively,then, the South appears to exert astronger “pull” on highly educatedblacks than it does on their whitecounterparts.
Among the states that sustained thelargest net losses of college graduatemigrants, three ranked among the top10 for both blacks and whites: NewYork, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. Whatdistinguished black “brain drain”states was the presence of economi-cally stagnant southern states(Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi) thatstill contain large black populations.White “brain drain” states, by contrast,are located primarily in the Northeastand Midwest. Without these signifi-cant outflows of educated blacks from“Deep South” states, migration pat-terns would have increased black edu-cation levels in the region by an evengreater degree. Still, the recent trendrepresents a dramatic departure fromthat prevailing a few decades ago, andcontributed to the rise of a growingmiddle-class black population inSouthern metropolitan areas.
E. After several decades as a majorblack migrant “magnet,” Californialost more black migrants than itgained during the late 1990s.The reversal of the “Great Migration”did not occur solely across the Mason-Dixon line. As shown earlier, Califor-nia led all states in its net gains ofblack migrants in the late 1960s andlate 1970s. Even in the late 1980s, thestate ranked sixth on this measure. Inthe 1995–2000 period, however, Cali-fornia ranked second in the nation forblack domestic migration losses. Inpart, this can be attributed to Califor-nia’s declining economy over thecourse of the 1990s. At the same time,however, the state’s most severe eco-nomic decline occurred during theearly part of the decade, rather thanthe later period for which the census
8
Figure 4. Net Migration Rates by Educational Attainment,Black and Whites, South Region, 1995–2000
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
WhitesBlacks
College GraduateSome CollegeH.S. DiplomaLess than H.S.
11.8 11.1
16.116.9
26.3
19.8
23.9
21.3
Net
Mig
ratio
n pe
r 1,
000
Popu
latio
n (a
t sp
ecifi
eded
ucat
ion
leve
l)
Table 4. Top “Brain Gain” and “Brain Drain” States, Blacks andWhites, 1995–2000
Rank Blacks Whites
Largest Net In-Migration of College Graduates
1 Georgia 20,297 Florida 133,721
2 Texas 11,609 Arizona 69,159
3 Maryland 11,468 North Carolina 59,224
4 Florida 5,976 Colorado 51,847
5 North Carolina 4,016 Georgia 44,755
6 Tennessee 2,466 California 36,145
7 Arizona 2,420 Texas 36,102
8 Nevada 1,848 Washington 32,251
9 Virginia 1,018 Nevada 28,636
10 Delaware 888 Oregon 23,099
Largest Net Out-Migration of College Graduates
1 New York -18,573 New York -134,103
2 Louisiana -6,608 Illinois -60,847
3 District of Columbia -5,601 Pennsylvania -55,093
4 Pennsylvania -4,040 Ohio -36,575
5 Alabama -3,019 Michigan -29,510
6 Mississippi -2,947 Indiana -28,496
7 Ohio -2,875 Iowa -25,094
8 Massachusetts -2,389 New Jersey -20,763
9 California -2,173 Louisiana -20,255
10 Oklahoma -1,669 Utah -15,143
Source: Author’s analysis of Census 2000 data
Source: Author’s analysis of Census 2000 data.
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
records migration data.11
California’s in- and out-migrationpatterns for blacks over the last 35years reflect a near mirror-image pat-tern of those in the South. That is,fewer blacks migrated to Californiafrom other states with each successivedecade, especially in the late 1990’s,as the number of blacks leaving Cali-
fornia increased (Figure 5). As aresult, the small black net in-migrationoccurring in the late 1980s gave wayto a noticeable black migration loss inthe late 1990s.
Reviewing the particular origins anddestinations of black migrants into andout of California helps illuminate howthe state became a net exporter of
blacks over time. In each of the lastfour census periods, Texas rankedeither first or second as an origin ofin-migrants to California, though itwas also the most popular destinationof blacks migrating out of California(Table 5). Although not quite as con-sistent, Louisiana shares a similar rela-tionship with California. Thus,whether California gained or lostblacks in its exchanges with Texas andLouisiana bore heavily on its overallmigration exchange with the rest ofthe U.S. After three periods in whichit experienced a net gain of blackmigrants from these two states, Cali-fornia lost more blacks to both statesthrough migration in the late 1990sthan it gained.
The destination states for blacksmigrating out of California havechanged more markedly over timethan have the origin states for blacksmoving to California. Northernstates—especially New York and Illi-nois—have long served as major feed-ers, with thousands of black residentsof New York City and Chicago movingwestward in each of the past fourdecades. Indeed, in the 1995–2000period, Texas, Illinois and New Yorkwere still among the top origin statesfor black migrants to California. In thelate 1960s and 1970s, migrants fromCalifornia—like in-migrants—wereprone to select Texas and Louisiana, aswell as Illinois, as part of the back-and-forth exchanges between thesestates. In the late 1980s, however,Georgia and Florida rapidly climbedthe list to become the second- andthird-most prominent destinations. Bythe late 1990s, three of the top fivedestinations were Southeastern states,which were joined by California’s next-door neighbor, Nevada.
In fact, the increased flow of blacksfrom California to the South largelyaccounts for the West’s transition froman “importer” to an “exporter” ofblacks to the South region over the1995–2000 period. California alonecontributed nearly three-fourths (73
9
Figure 6. California’s Black Migration Exchange with Other States, 1995–2000
Top Ten States Gaining Blacks from CA
Other States Gaining Blacks from CA
States Losing Blacks to CASource: Author’s analysis of Census 2000 data.
Figure 5. Black Migration Rates, California, 1965–2000
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
1995–20001985–19901970–19801965–1970
Net MigrationOut-MigrationIn-Migration
Mig
ratio
n pe
r 1,
000
popu
latio
n
Source: Author’s analysis of 1970, 1980, 1990 and 2000 decennial censuses.
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
percent) of the South’s net migrationgain of blacks from the West in thelate 1990s.
Other states in the West have alsobegun to gain black population fromCalifornia. In recent decades, substan-tial shares of California’s white out-migrants located in surrounding statessuch as Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, andWashington. In fact, some analystshave proposed that California’s migra-tion streams are part of two “migrationsystems”: a nationwide exchange ofhigh-skilled labor between all states;and a “spillover” migration to neigh-boring Western states with more mid-dle- and lower-level socioeconomicattributes.12 The spillover migrationreflects in part a movement away fromthe high cost of living in Californiametropolitan areas toward moreaffordable, less congested communi-
ties in nearby states. This out-migra-tion pattern largely accounted for Cal-ifornia’s state-wide loss of domesticmigrants in the late 1990’s.13
On a somewhat smaller scale, Cali-fornia’s blacks have joined in this“spillover” migration to surroundingstates. The state has lost blackmigrants on net in its exchange withWashington and Oregon since the late1960s. The pattern expanded toinclude Nevada in the late 1970s, andArizona in the late 1980s, even as Cal-ifornia gained blacks on net fromother parts of the country. As with Cal-ifornia’s out-migrants in general,blacks moving to nearby states in thelate 1990s tended to have lower edu-cation levels than the black populationat large.14
Overall, California lost blacks in itsmigration exchange with 38 other
states between 1995 and 2000 (Figure6). The states receiving the greatestnumbers of California’s blacksincluded fast-growing Southeasternstates (Georgia, Virginia, Florida), aswell as traditional Southern destina-tions like Texas and Louisiana. Thedata also confirm a “spillover” of blackout-migrants to nearby states in theWest (Nevada, Washington, Arizona).The geographic breadth of this out-migration, and the long-term trend itculminates, suggest that California’snet loss of blacks in the late 1990sreflects more than a symptom of thestate’s contemporary economic woes.It remains to be seen whether Califor-nia will re-emerge as a major migra-tion magnet for blacks in theforeseeable future.
10
Table 5. Black Migration Exchange between California and Other States, 1965–2000
Rank 1965–70 Period 1975–80 Period 1985–90 Period 1995–2000 Period
In-Migration from Other States
1 Texas 19,193 New York 16,804 Texas 19,146 Texas 9,181
2 Louisiana 18,213 Texas 15,323 Louisiana 13,644 New York 6,743
3 Illinois 9,562 Illinois 14,344 New York 13,524 Illinois 5,913
Source: Author’s analysis of 1970, 1980, 1990, and 2000 decennial censuses
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series
Conclusion
This analysis of Census 2000migration data documents thefull-scale reversal of blackAmericans’ migration out of
the South—a movement that domi-nated the better part of the 20th cen-tury. Moreover, the latest census is thefirst to show that the South experi-enced a net migration gain of blacksfrom the other three regions of thecountry. Overall, the South’s gainsover the 1995–2000 period roughlydoubled those recorded in the 1990census, and tripled those recorded inthe 1980 census.
Both economic and cultural factorshelp account for this long-term rever-sal of the “Great Migration.” The eco-nomic ascendancy of Southeasternstates such as Georgia, Florida, Vir-ginia, and the Carolinas made themprimary destinations for blackmigrants to the region in recentdecades. Texas, too, stands out for itscontinued appeal to black migrants.Improvements in the racial climate inthese states over the past threedecades helped create momentum forthe return south, as many black Amer-icans sought to strengthen ties to kinand to communities from which theyand their forebears departed long ago.Yet on their return south, blacks byand large are not settling in the “DeepSouth” states that registered the great-est out-migration of blacks in the late1960s. Atlanta, for instance, was farand away the premier nationwide des-tination for blacks in the late 1990s.
The survey also finds that whenthey relocate from the Northeast, Mid-west, and West, blacks—particularlythose with higher levels of educa-tion—are more likely than whites tohead to the South. The black popula-tion’s participation in an increasinglynationwide labor market, and its pref-erence for Southern destinations, havefueled rising incomes and a growingblack middle class and upper-middleclass in several of the region’s fast-
growing metropolitan areas.15 In turn,these communities may be helping toattract other educated black migrantswho seek to draw on their emergingprofessional networks.
This cycle of black migration to theSouth has, however, drawn strengthfrom the places blacks left in thegreatest numbers. The Northeast andMidwest—particularly the New Yorkand Chicago metropolises—lostincreasing numbers of blacks to theSouth over the past three decades. Bythe late 1990s, the West had beentransformed from a receiver to asender of black migrants to the South.As with large Northeast and Midweststates like New York and Illinois, Cali-fornia represented the West region’smajor destination for blacks leavingthe South during the mid-20th cen-tury. Even as Northern states startedto lose black migrants in the 1970sand 1980s, California remained, onnet, a destination for blacks. In themost recent census, however, a plural-
ity of blacks leaving California locatedin southern states, at the same timethat many black out-migrants followedother populations that “spilled out”into neighboring Western states. Thesetrends confirm that a broad-based setof states and metropolitan areas haveseen their more mobile, often moreeducated black populations leave forthe growing South.
With its demographic and geo-graphic breadth, combined with thestrong cultural and economic ties thatthe South holds for blacks, the “NewGreat Migration” has all the signs of acontinuing trend. While we have yet tofully appreciate its implications oneconomic, political, and race relationsfronts, future research should examinethe importance of this developmentnot only for the South but also for theplaces that black Americans are leav-ing behind in increasing numbers.
Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY MSA 53,424 6.1 -256 -138 1,696 -458
Source: Author’s analysis of 1970, 1980, 1990, and 2000 decennial censuses.
Endnotes
1. Horace C. Hamilton, “The Negro Leaves
the South.” Demography 1 (1964):
273–95; Nicholas Lemann, The Promised
Land: The Great Migration and How it
Changed America (New York: Knopf,
1991).
2. The regions are defined as follows: North-
east includes the states of CT, ME, MA,
NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VT. Midwest includes
IL, IN, IO, KS, MI, MN, MO, NE, ND,
OH, SD, WI. South includes AL, AR, DE,
DC, FL, GA, LA, MD, MS, NC, OK, SC,
TN, TX, VA, WV. West includes AK, AZ,
CA, CO, HI, ID, MT, NV, NM, OR, UT,
WA, WY.
3. This survey uses data from metropolitan
areas defined by OMB as of June 30, 1999,
and in effect for Census 2000. New metro-
politan area definitions were announced by
OMB in June 2003.
4. U.S. Census Bureau, “2000 Census of
Population and Housing, Public Use
Microdata Sample, United States: Techni-
cal Documentation” (Department of Com-
merce, 2003). Throughout the paper, the
term “white” refers to non-Hispanic indi-
viduals who identified “white” as their sole
race.
5. William H. Frey and Alden Speare, Jr.,
Regional and Metropolitan Growth and
Decline in the United States (New York:
Russell Sage Foundation, 1988); Larry
Long, Migration and Residential Mobility in
the United States (New York: Russell Sage
Foundation, 1988).
6. While not specifically pictured in Figure 1,
net black migration from the Northeast to
the South was 65,000 persons higher in
1995–2000 than in 1985–1990; the com-
parable increase from the Midwest was
30,000.
7. It is noteworthy, however, that Alabama
actually had a net gain of black migrants in
the late 1990s, after experiencing the sec-
ond-largest net loss of blacks among the 50
states in the late 1960s (Appendix B).
8. Stewart E. Tolnay, “Educational Selection
in the Migration of Southern Blacks,
1880–1990.” Social Forces 77 (2) (1998):
489–514.
9. For example, about 1.5 million black adult
(age 25 and over) college graduates lived in
the South in 2000. Between 1995 and
2000, a little over 90,000 black college
graduates migrated into the South (61.4
for every 1,000), while about 55,000 black
college graduates migrated out of the
South (37.5 for every 1,000). Therefore,
net migration for black college graduates
into the South was roughly 35,000 out of
1.5 million, or 23.9 per 1,000 (61.4 minus
37.5).
10. Long, Migration and Residential Mobility in
the United States.
11. Joel Kotkin, California: A Twenty-First Cen-
tury Prospectus (Denver: Center for the
New West, 1997).
12. William H Frey, “Immigration and Internal
Migration: 1990 Census Findings for Cali-
fornia.” Research Report No. 94-306 (Uni-
versity of Michigan Population Studies
Center, 1994).
13. Associated Press, “Census Finds More
Americans Flee Than Find California
Dream.” The New York Times. August 6,
2003, p. A12; Jonathan Tilove, “Migration
Patterns Point to a Nation of Three Ameri-
cas.” Newhouse News Service, 2003.
14. William H. Frey, “Metro Magnets for Inter-
national and Domestic Migrants” (Wash-
ington: Brookings Institution, 2003).
15. William H. Frey, “Revival.” American
Demographics, October 2003, pp. 27–31.
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series 15
References
Frey, William H. 1994. “Immigrationand Internal Migration: 1990 CensusFindings for California.” ResearchReport No. 94-306. University ofMichigan Population Studies Center.
–––––––––––––. 1999. “New BlackMigration Patterns in the UnitedStates: Are They Affected by RecentImmigration?” In Frank D. Bean andStephanie Bell-Rose (eds.), Immigra-tion and Opportunity: Race, Ethnicity,and Employment in the United States.New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
–––––––––––––. 2001. “Census 2000Shows Large Black Return to theSouth, Reinforcing the Region’s‘White-Black’ Demographic Profile.”Research Report No. 01-473. Univer-sity of Michigan Population StudiesCenter.
–––––––––––––. 2003b. “Metro Mag-nets for International and DomesticMigrants.” Washington: BrookingsInstitution.
Frey, William H. and Alden Speare, Jr.1988. Regional and MetropolitanGrowth and Decline in the UnitedStates. New York: Russell Sage Foun-dation.
Hamilton, C. Horace. 1964. “TheNegro Leaves the South.” Demography1: 273–95.
Kotkin, Joel. 1997. California: ATwenty-First Century Prospectus. Denver: Center for the New West.
Lemann, Nicholas. 1991. ThePromised Land: The Great Migrationand How it Changed America. NewYork: Knopf.
Long, Larry. 1988. Migration and Resi-dential Mobility in the United States.New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
Associated Press. 2003. “Census FindsMore Americans Flee Than Find Cali-fornia Dream.” The New York Times,August 6, p. A12.
Tilove, Jonathan. 2003. “MigrationPatterns Point to a Nation of ThreeAmericas.” Washington: NewhouseNews Service.
Tolnay, Stewart E. 1998. “EducationalSelection in the Migration of SouthernBlacks, 1880–1990.” Social Forces 77(2): 489–514.
U.S. Census Bureau. 2003. 2000 Cen-sus of Population in Housing, PublicUse Microdata Sample. Technical Doc-umentation.
May 2004 • The Brookings Institution The Living Cities Census Series 16
AcknowledgmentsThe author is grateful to seniorproject programmer Cathy Sunand other support staff at the Uni-versity of Michigan PopulationStudies Center, as well as to AlanBerube for comments on thisreport.
For More Information:William H. FreyVisiting FellowThe Brookings InstitutionPhone: (888) 257–[email protected]
For General Information:The Brookings InstitutionCenter on Urban and Metropolitan Policy(202) 797-6139www.brookings.edu/urban
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