NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,033
This from a Wall Street Journal article today about which US cities most attract the 18-29 demographic:
I find that very interesting, if it is accurate. During the Great Depression and other recessions since, people tended to pick up and move to try to find work. If he's right, suddenly that tactic has largely been abandoned, at least in terms of changing states.
If this is true, I think the key must be the housing bubble -- instead of renting as they did in previous generations, more people bought homes, and now many of them are stuck in a home that they cannot get out of.
"The recession has brought migration to a grinding halt: Fewer people moved across state lines in 2008 than at any time since 1950, when the population was smaller by half, says William Frey, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit Washington research organization."]
I find that very interesting, if it is accurate. During the Great Depression and other recessions since, people tended to pick up and move to try to find work. If he's right, suddenly that tactic has largely been abandoned, at least in terms of changing states.
If this is true, I think the key must be the housing bubble -- instead of renting as they did in previous generations, more people bought homes, and now many of them are stuck in a home that they cannot get out of.