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Americans moving less during economic downturn



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As someone who moved around a bit over the years, I always tend to view the US as a place where it's easier to move than many other countries in the world. In Europe we do have some movement, but it tends to be from smaller cities to the primary city in a specific country. Shifting from one country to the other is much less common for many reasons. Americans on the other hand are much more comfortable packing up and moving to another state or part of the country.

That trend is now on hold, though it may be temporary. When the economy does finally settle and people are more comfortable with their jobs, will they still move to the sunny states? The housing may be cheap but where will the jobs be?

Using this and other data from the I.R.S. that many researchers consider even more comprehensive, they found that migration into formerly booming states like Arizona, Florida and Nevada began to slow as soon as the recession hit and continued to shrink even into 2010, when many demographers expected it to level off. At the same time, Massachusetts, New York and California, which had been hemorrhaging people for years, and continued to do so in the three years before the financial collapse, suddenly saw the domestic migration loss shrink by as much as 90 percent.

Mobility always tends to slow in times of economic hardship, and there has been a gradual decline in American mobility for decades. But census numbers released earlier this year showed that domestic migration in 2010 had plummeted substantially since the recession began and reached the lowest level since the government began tracking it in the 1940s.

“When times get really hard it gets really hard for people to up and move,” said Kenneth M. Johnson, the senior demographer at the Carsey Institute, who conducted the analysis. “People who might have left New York for North Carolina are staying put. But that is a very recent change, so that places that had been growing rapidly suddenly aren’t, and the outflow has really slowed down.”


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