New Jersey Policy Lab: New Jersey Intercounty Migration Trends, 2018-2019

February 4, 2022

by Tia Azzi and Michael Lahr, R/Econ for New Jersey Policy Lab

The latest report from R/ECON examines the migration trends across counties within New Jersey between 2018 and 2019. This report uses Internal Revenue Service (IRS) data, rather than that from the U.S. Census, to report migration by county.

This analysis divides New Jersey into five regions to assess the trends of intercounty migration. In- and out-migration of counties within the regions tends to be driven largely by intercounty movements within the regions. First, the Highlands counties of Sussex, Warren, and Hunterdon experienced positive net migration rates, largely from neighboring northern NJ counties – Morris, Somerset, and Passaic counties. Second, the three shore counties of Atlantic, Ocean, and Cape May also experienced positive net migration rates. Ocean was a recipient of significant inflows from Monmouth County. The continued upswing in the state’s economy and the rising propensity to telecommute undoubtedly supported the positive rates for these first two regions. Third, in South Jersey, Camden and Cumberland counties experienced negative net in-state in-migration. Camden is the region’s urban core, and its negative rate aligns with the experience of core urban counties of North Jersey–Essex, Hudson, and Union. Fourth, Central Jersey presented a mixed set of in-migration rates from 2018 to 2019, albeit all centered near-zero net migration. Finally, in North Jersey, the region largest in terms of population of the five New Jersey regions (about 44% of the state’s population), only Morris County experienced a positive net in-state in-migration rate. Of the six counties of North Jersey, only Morris lacks a substantial urban core and is also furthest from Manhattan.

This report concludes that while there is some discussion by politicians, developers, real estate professionals, and transit advocates[i] about New Jerseyans’ preferences to move to transportation hubs, IRS data suggest that suburbanization within the state continued to be a mainstay of development. Additionally, intercounty migration tends to occur most frequently between neighboring counties, as households generally opt not to move too far from their original homes.

For further analysis on intrastate migration rates within specific counties, read R/Econ’s full report.

Figure 1: County Net Migration Rates in New Jersey, 2018-2019

County Net Migration Rates in New Jersey, 2018-2019
Source: U.S. Internal Revenue Service. (2021). “SOI Tax Stats-Migration Data” with R/ECON calculations

[i] Evans Tim. (2019). “Job Growth Finally Following Population to Compact Centers,” New Jersey Future Blog, May 3. Available online in February 2022 from https://www.njfuture.org/2019/05/03/job-growth-compact-centers/

Evans, Tim. (2019). “Population Growth in Older Centers (but not all of them) Continues to Outstrip the Rest of the State,” New Jersey Future Blog, June 3. Available online in February 2022 from https://www.njfuture.org/2019/06/03/population-growth-higher-in-older-centers/

Fitzgerald, Thomas. (2021). “N.J. Gov. Phil Murphy Launches Project to Overhaul South Jersey’s Public Transit Hub,” The Philadelphia Inquirer, February 17. Available online in February 2022 from https://www.inquirer.com/transportation/camden-walter-rand-redevelopment-south-jersey-transporation-hub-20210217.html

p of people of all ages, races, and backgrounds who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer. Often, the LGBTQ acronym is written with a plus at the end to represent other identities including, but not limited to, nonbinary, genderqueer, and gender non-conforming.

Recent Posts

Lindenfeld Investigates LFO Impacts on Health Outcomes

Legal Financial Obligations: An Understudied Public Health Exposure Abstract The impacts of exposure to the criminal justice system on health-related outcomes are well studied in the United States (US). However, while previous studies focus on the impacts of arrest,...

EJB Talks: Beyond “Does It Work?”

Beyond “Does It Work?”: Laura Peck on Policy, Evidence, and Impact EJB Talks returns for Season 14 with Dean Stuart Shapiro speaking with Laura Peck, one of our newest Public Policy Associate Professors and a Principal Faculty Fellow with the Heldrich Center for...

Heldrich Center: Motivational Texts and Unemployment

Original post from the Daily Targum By Akash Nattamai Researchers at the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development recently published a report regarding the effectiveness of motivational text messaging on reintroducing people in the statewide Reemployment...

Guest Speaker Lerrel Pinto: Robot Data is Not Enough Data

How can robots make physical labor easier for humans? This past week, Prof. Lerrel Pinto gave a talk at the Bloustein School titled "Robot Data is Not Enough Data." Lerrel Pinto is the co-founder of Assured Robot Intelligence (ARI) and an Assistant Professor of...