Americans Are Fleeing These US Cities In Droves

Zero Hedge – by Tyler Durden

What do El Paso, New York, and Chicago have in common? They are among the top 20 cities from which Americans are fleeing in droves…

The map below shows the 20 metropolitan areas that lost the greatest share of local people to other parts of the country between July 2013 and July 2014, according to a Bloomberg News analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data. The New York City area ranked 2nd, losing about a net 163,000 U.S. residents, closely followed by a couple surrounding suburbs in Connecticut. Honolulu ranked fourth and Los Angeles ranked 14th. The Bloomberg calculations looked at the 100 most populous U.S. metropolitan areas.  

So what’s going on here? As Bloomberg notes, Michael Stoll, a professor of public policy and urban planning at the University of California Los Angeles, has an idea.

Soaring home prices are pushing local residents out and scaring away potential new ones from other parts of the country, he said. (Everyone knows how unaffordable the Manhattan area has become.)

And as Americans leave, people from abroad move in to these bustling cities to fill the vacant low-skilled jobs. They are able to do so by living in what Stoll calls “creative housing arrangements” in which they pack six to eight individuals, or two to four families, into one apartment or home. It’s an arrangement that most Americans just aren’t willing to pursue, and even many immigrants decide it’s not for them as time goes by, he said.

El Paso, Texas, the city that residents fled from at the fastest pace, also saw a surprisingly small number of foreigners settling in given how close it is to Mexico.

“A lot of young, reasonably educated people are having a hard time finding work there,” Stoll said. “They’re not staying in town after they graduate,” leaving for the faster-growing economies.”

Source: Bloomberg

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-22/americans-are-fleeing-these-us-cities-droves

6 thoughts on “Americans Are Fleeing These US Cities In Droves

  1. “… Los Angeles ranked 14th.”

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  2. Not surprised about El Paso (I lived there for 8 months to teach there in a gangland HS and hated it (the job too). Why live in El Paso when it is surrounded by small towns and rural communities…you can work in El Paso but live 30 plus miles away and commute (the traffic isn’t that bad). When I worked in NYC and lived on Long Island it took 1 1/2 hours to commute to work. One and a half hours out of El Paso is virtually rural (best if you got a place west of that G-D Sierra Blanca checkpoint though…)

  3. Well with two of the cities I see 2nd amendment infringements are probably a large part of why some people are bailing
    I know I would be leaving too

  4. I see Las Vegas isn’t on the list. Maybe that’s because we’re getting a good majority of what’s leaving other city’s. At just shy of two million and growing you can see the cloud of stench floating in the sky like smog in socal. Five more weeks and I’ll be in a small town of only two hundred, leaving the decaying stench of this cesspool behind.

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