The migratory impact of COVID-19: The role of time and distances in the migration decisions of Hungarians during the COVID-19 pandemic

被引:1
|
作者
Zoeldi, Laszlo Zoltan [1 ,2 ]
Ligeti, Anna Sara [3 ,4 ,6 ]
Csanyi, Zoltan [2 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Budapest Business Sch, Budapest, Hungary
[2] Hungarian Cent Stat Off, Populat Census & Demog Stat Dept, Budapest, Hungary
[3] Natl Lab Hlth Secur, HUN REN Ctr Social Sci, Computat Social Sci Res Grp, Budapest, Hungary
[4] Univ Pecs, Fac Humanities & Social Sci, Pecs, Hungary
[5] Univ Barcelona, Fac Econ & Business, Barcelona, Spain
[6] HUN REN Ctr Social Sci, H-1097 Budapest, Hungary
关键词
COVID-19; geographical mobility; interrupted time series analysis; RETURN MIGRATION;
D O I
10.1002/psp.2804
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
Despite obvious consequences of pandemics on human mobility, attempts to quantify the migratory impact of COVID-19 remained scarce, largely due to a general lack of data necessary for such assessments. The guiding principle of this paper is that common statistical definitions of migration-linked to usual residences-fail to capture a considerable share of the fast-changing and diverse universe of cross-border movements, which characterized the years of the pandemic. In this study, panels of short- and longer-term movements were created, and hybrid (machine learning-supported) interrupted time series analyses were performed on the basis of pre-pandemic monthly migration flows data to quantify the impact of COVID-19 on international migration. Social insurance data up to 2019 was used to estimate counterfactual emigration and return flows of Hungarians for 2020 and 2021 and compared with actual migration data a posteriori. Beyond the durations of staying abroad, we sought to look at how COVID-related impacts on migration differ by destinations. In accordance with the results, 25% of expected emigrations in cumulative terms had not taken place due to the pandemic if only long-term migrations are considered. This share is 22% when a more flexible conceptualization of geographic mobilities is applied. Behind this relatively small difference, however, there are large variations by destinations. Although similar cumulative impact cannot be detected in case of return migrations, the outbreak of the coronavirus resulted in an unprecedented wave of backwards mobilities, the impact of which however was fading away by the end of the 2-years period.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Spatiotemporal Distribution of Tuberculosis and COVID-19 During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Libya
    Daw, Mohamed A.
    Zgheel, Faraj A.
    El-Bouzedi, Abdallah
    Ahmed, Mohamed O.
    DISASTER MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH PREPAREDNESS, 2021, 15 (04) : E43 - E45
  • [12] Did the COVID-19 consortium recommendations impact the treatment of breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic?
    Fefferman, Marie L.
    Chan, Kelley
    Cotler, Joseph
    Thompson, Danielle M.
    Bleicher, Richard J.
    Kurtzman, Scott H.
    Dietz, Jill M.
    Yao, Katharine
    BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2025, : 11 - 22
  • [13] Beyond COVID-19 deaths during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States
    Jacobson, Sheldon H.
    Jokela, Janet A.
    HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2021, 24 (04) : 661 - 665
  • [14] Sustaining Trade during COVID-19 Pandemic: Establishing a Conceptual Model Including COVID-19 Impact
    Saif, Nashwan M. A.
    Ruan, Jianping
    Obrenovic, Bojan
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 13 (10)
  • [15] The impact of public attention during the COVID-19 pandemic?
    Platania, Federico
    Hernandez, Celina Toscano
    Moreno, Manuel
    Appio, Francesco
    FINANCE RESEARCH LETTERS, 2023, 58
  • [16] The role of lean in healthcare during COVID-19 pandemic
    Leite, Higor
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITY & RELIABILITY MANAGEMENT, 2023, 40 (06) : 1389 - 1411
  • [17] The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on SLE
    Zhao, Xingwang
    Wu, Haohao
    Li, Shifei
    Gao, Cuie
    Wang, Juan
    Ge, Lan
    Song, Zhiqiang
    Ni, Bing
    You, Yi
    MODERN RHEUMATOLOGY, 2024, 34 (02) : 247 - 264
  • [18] The Role and Views of Ophthalmologists During the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Kortuem, Friederike C.
    Ziemssen, Focke
    Kortuem, Karsten U.
    Kortuem, Constanze
    CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY, 2021, 15 : 3947 - 3956
  • [19] The impact of misinformation on the COVID-19 pandemic
    Caceres, Maria Mercedes Ferreira
    Sosa, Juan Pablo
    Lawrence, Jannel A.
    Sestacovschi, Cristina
    Tidd-Johnson, Atiyah
    Rasool, Muhammad Haseeb U., I
    Gadamidi, Vinay Kumar
    Ozair, Saleha
    Pandav, Krunal
    Cuevas-Lou, Claudia
    Parrish, Matthew
    Rodriguez, Ivan
    Fernandez, Javier Perez
    AIMS PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 9 (02): : 262 - 277
  • [20] The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on tourism
    Barotsaki, A.
    ARCHIVES OF HELLENIC MEDICINE, 2022, 39 (03): : 412 - 414