Abstract
This article reports on the results of 69 individual qualitative interviews in Cuenca, Ecuador, conducted with lifestyle migrants in 2011, 2012 and 2013. Many of the North American migrants interviewed are in Ecuador for economic reasons, a motivation that has been under-theorised in lifestyle migration literature. The paper develops the concept of geographic arbitrage to explore the motivations and strategies of migrants in a context of structural inequalities and geographic differentiation in labour costs. Geographic arbitrage consists of relocating day-to-day expenses to low-cost locations, a strategy that is perhaps of increasing importance in North American, given the lack of retirement security there. The paper argues that the strategy of geographic arbitrage of North Americans to Cuenca is framed by powerful players in the field of international lifestyle marketing and by the socio-economic context of the migrants themselves.
Notes
[1] I do not wish to imply that European case studies have ignored economic motivations (cf. Huete Citation2009; King, Warnes, and Williams Citation1998; Karkabi Citation2013; Korpela Citation2009; Özlem and O'Reilly Citation2009). They have often mentioned them, but generally have not provided a full account of how economic changes structure southward lifestyle migration, with the exception of Huete, Mantecón, and Estévez (Citation2013), who primarily address return migration in light of the recent economic crisis.
[2] Twenty couples were interviewed at the same time.