A comparative analysis of rural-urban migration in three states of India : Bihar, West Bengal and Kerala
Abstract
This work is a comparative analysis of patterns of selectivity in
rural to urban migration within three Indian states- Bihar, West
Bengal and Kerala. The rationale for concentrating on these three
provinces is to show how regional-level diversities in socio-cultural
patterns and economic development, as well as in demographic
conditions, account for the differing patterns of migration
selectivity. The analysis is confined to five variables: age, sex,
marital status, occupation and education. The censuses of India, 1961
and 1971 are the chief sources of data. Important findings emerging
from this study are:
Rural-urban migration is highly selective of young adults, but
female migrants in these states are younger than male migrants.
Female migrants are still younger in Bihar and West Bengal than in
Kerala because of the difference in age at marriage, whilst there is
no difference in the age at migration of males in these states. Rural
to urban migration is highly selective of males, and the incidence of
male selectivity is greater in Bihar than in West Bengal and in West
Bengal than in Kerala. Sex is found to be associated with distance in
migration; at shorter distances, females predominate and at longer
distances, males predominate.
With regard to marital status of migrants, there are some marked
variations between the sexes and states. For instance, in all states
single males are more migratory than either married males or single
females. However, both never married and ever married males are more
migratory in Kerala than in Bihar and West Bengal. Single females are more migratory in Kerala than in Bihar and West Bengal.
Migrants tend to show a higher rate of workforce participation
than non-migrants at destination. The economic motive for female
migration is quite weak in these states, but it is still weaker in
Bihar and West Bengal relative to Kerala. Education plays a very
decisive role in rural to urban migration. Educated persons are more
likely to migrate than illiterate and merely literate persons.
Educated female migrants are more likely to be non-workers in Bihar
and West Bengal and workers in Kerala.
Although contrasts in economic conditions are much greater
between West Bengal on the one hand and Bihar and Kerala on the other,
differences in the patterns of migration selectivity are much sharper
between Bihar and West Bengal on the one hand and Kerala on the other.
Social and cultural variations, particularly with regard to the age at
marriage, marriage practices, level of literacy, status of women,
practice of familial migration and female workforce participation,
between North and South India seem to explain the differing patterns
of migratory behaviour much more than economic variables. As regional
variations exercise a profound impact on the migratory behaviour of a
population, it is hard to evolve universally applicable differentials
of migration. It is for this reason that little progress has been
made towards building a general theory of differentials in migration.
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