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Tuesday, November 05, 2013

Middle-Class Migration

Americans are moving away from high-tax, high-housing-cost states.

Where are Americans moving, and why? Timothy Noah, writing in the Washington Monthly, professes to be puzzled. He points out that people have been moving out of states with high per capita incomes — Connecticut, New York, Massachusetts, Maryland — to states with lower income levels.

“Why are Americans by and large moving away from economic opportunity rather than toward it?” he asks.

Actually, it’s not puzzling at all. The movement from high-tax, high-housing-cost states to low-tax, low-housing-cost states has been going on for more than 40 years, as I note in my new bookShaping Our Nation: How Surges of Migration Transformed America and Its Politics. Between 1970 and 2010, the population of New York state increased from 18 million to 19 million. In that same period, the population of Texas increased from 11 million to 25 million. The picture is even starker if you look at major metro areas. The New York metropolitan area, including counties in New Jersey and Connecticut, increased from 17.8 million in 1970 to 19.2 million in 2010 — up 8 percent. During that time, the nation grew 52 percent. In the same period, the four big metro areas in Texas — Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Austin — grew from 6 million to 15.6 million, a 160 percent increase.

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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Taxation. It is really that simple. Most of my family is from NY/NJ. Regular working class people. The property taxes they pay on quite frankly starter homes(1000-1600 sq ft) range from 5-10K a year. A few family members have moved down south...larger homes for hundreds of thousands less, with taxes much lower than Maryland's eastern shore. It's a no brainer.