UGC Approved Journal no 63975(19)
New UGC Peer-Reviewed Rules

ISSN: 2349-5162 | ESTD Year : 2014
Volume 12 | Issue 10 | October 2025

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Published in:

Volume 12 Issue 3
March-2025
eISSN: 2349-5162

UGC and ISSN approved 7.95 impact factor UGC Approved Journal no 63975

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Published Paper ID:
JETIR2503405


Registration ID:
557012

Page Number

d938-d946

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Title

FACTORS OF MIGRATION IN INDIA:A STUDY

Abstract

According to data from the 2011 census and the 64th round of the NSSO (2007–08), internal migration in India has grown significantly. Compared to the rural migration rate of 26%, the urban migration rate of 35% was significantly higher. While 59% of urban migrants were from rural areas and 40% were from urban areas, nearly 91% of rural migrants and 8% of urban migrants were from rural areas. In terms of migratory streams, rural-urban migration plays a significant role. The lowest socioeconomic class migrants in metropolitan India are constrained as a result of macroeconomic reforms. A somber and diverse picture of recent migrants who moved before five years is presented by the 2007–08 NSS migration figures. The majority of interstate migration to metropolitan regions is male, indicating less movement across socioeconomic classes. It is supported by the inverse relationship between the interstate migration rate and per capita income. The number of low-income urban migrants is increasing, suggesting that they comprise the majority of migrants. This is not the same as the previous NSS round, where migration and economic status were connected. It is necessary to investigate why migratory patterns have shifted over the past decade. More people from lower socioeconomic groups are moving to urban areas. Urbanization and the socioeconomic divide between rural and urban areas are the root causes of these migration trends. Given current urbanization and regional disparities, the shifting economy may lead to a rise in migration to urban regions. Finding emerging issues, obstacles, and policy priorities for urban growth requires a thorough examination of migratory trends. Integrating jobs and social services with migration policies is the problem at the policy level in order to enhance the welfare of urban migrants.

Key Words

Migration, Precedence Growth, Urbanization and socioeconomic.

Cite This Article

"FACTORS OF MIGRATION IN INDIA:A STUDY", International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research (www.jetir.org), ISSN:2349-5162, Vol.12, Issue 3, page no.d938-d946, March-2025, Available :http://www.jetir.org/papers/JETIR2503405.pdf

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2349-5162 | Impact Factor 7.95 Calculate by Google Scholar

An International Scholarly Open Access Journal, Peer-Reviewed, Refereed Journal Impact Factor 7.95 Calculate by Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool, Multidisciplinary, Monthly, Multilanguage Journal Indexing in All Major Database & Metadata, Citation Generator

Cite This Article

"FACTORS OF MIGRATION IN INDIA:A STUDY", International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research (www.jetir.org | UGC and issn Approved), ISSN:2349-5162, Vol.12, Issue 3, page no. ppd938-d946, March-2025, Available at : http://www.jetir.org/papers/JETIR2503405.pdf

Publication Details

Published Paper ID: JETIR2503405
Registration ID: 557012
Published In: Volume 12 | Issue 3 | Year March-2025
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): http://doi.one/10.1729/Journal.44172
Page No: d938-d946
Country: -, -, India .
Area: Engineering
ISSN Number: 2349-5162
Publisher: IJ Publication


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