Author Topic: What the Top Five States People Are Moving from Have in Common  (Read 247 times)

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rangerrebew

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What the Top Five States People Are Moving from Have in Common
« on: January 06, 2016, 07:30:28 pm »
What the Top Five States People Are Moving from Have in Common

Salim Furth / January 06, 2016

Americans are moving to places with affordable costs of living and strong labor markets (or good retirement communities). The top destination states of 2015 could hardly be more different geographically and culturally: Oregon and South Carolina. What they have in common is that both states are relatively affordable places to live.

The data on moving comes from United Van Lines, which ranks the states based on the proportion of interstate moves that were inbound or outbound.

In Oregon, 69 percent of moves were inbound. The state with the worst ratio was New Jersey, from which 67 percent of moves were outbound.

The top five outbound states of 2015 were:

    New Jersey
    New York
    Illinois
    Connecticut
    Ohio

In metro Portland, Ore., the average owner-occupied home cost $305,402 in 2013, compared to $380,420 in Seattle or a budget-busting $730,156 in San Francisco. But even in Portland there is room for improvement: easing regulation a bit could make the average house $39,000 more affordable.

In South Carolina, homes are even cheaper, with free market competition keeping the price of a new home close to the actual construction cost.

Where urban and suburban land use regulation is modest, builders can meet demand with new supply. In places like San Francisco or Boston that lack that flexibility, people leave despite those cities’ high wages and dynamic economies.

Moving patterns show how important cost of living is to American families. With perfect weather and a booming, high-tech economy, California ought to be the #1 destination. Instead, more moving trucks are leaving the state than entering.

The top five inbound states of 2015 were:

    Oregon
    South Carolina
    Vermont
    Idaho
    North Carolina

Policymakers can lower the cost of living by removing unnecessary regulations and licensure requirements, streamlining bureaucracy, and ending protections that have been granted to favored industries.

http://dailysignal.com//print?post_id=236529
« Last Edit: January 06, 2016, 07:31:13 pm by rangerrebew »

Offline Sanguine

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Re: What the Top Five States People Are Moving from Have in Common
« Reply #1 on: January 06, 2016, 07:34:34 pm »
Thank goodness Texas is off the list this year!

Online mountaineer

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Re: What the Top Five States People Are Moving from Have in Common
« Reply #2 on: January 06, 2016, 07:36:49 pm »
One unnecessary regulation in Oregon is the prohibition against self-serve gas stations. Only gas station attendants may pump your gas. Ridiculous. The 5 cent deposit on plastic and glass bottles also is annoying.
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Offline truth_seeker

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Re: What the Top Five States People Are Moving from Have in Common
« Reply #3 on: January 06, 2016, 07:38:30 pm »
San Francisco is both a city and a county, on a peninsula with no room to expand. That constricts supply, while demand for very high paying jobs keeps pressure on the demand side.

Same is true to a great extent for NYC, Wash. DC, Boston etc.

Most places with low costs have room to grow. Dallas, Phoenix, Houston, Sacramento, Denver, etc.

Orange County Calif., is after San Francisco County, the most densely populated in the state. Prime underutilized parcels in built out areas, is being "repurposed" or rezoned to high density housing.

Why? Because there is demand, and high paying jobs. Medical, technical, service industries, etc.



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Offline musiclady

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Re: What the Top Five States People Are Moving from Have in Common
« Reply #4 on: January 06, 2016, 07:41:08 pm »
Funny........... the part of Ohio I'm in has a very low cost of living.  A person coming from either west or east coast could buy at least 5 houses here for the price they bought one for in their home states.

I'm staying put.
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