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Source: American Community SurveyThis rising mobility was driven by remote workers who sought new housing in their same metro areas, but also by a wave of remote workers decamping to other parts of the country. The rise of remote work meant that many such workers moved into these places, too. But for New York, San Francisco, Washington and Los Angeles, significantly more remote workers left than arrived. New York Metro Area Net domestic migration of workers Prepandemic 2018-19 Pandemic 2020-21 In-person workers Remote The N.Y.C. The remote workers identified this way may range from hybrid workers who primarily work from home to permanent remote workers and self-employed people who have no nearby office to visit.
Persons: , Hans Johnson, Johnson, Nicholas Bloom, Mr, Bloom, Adam Ozimek, Ozimek, Eric Carlson, It’s, Organizations: San, Major Metros, metros, York, Angeles, Washington, Seattle, Raleigh, Diego, Dallas, Sacramento, Hartford, American, Survey, San Jose metros, New York Metro Area Net, Public, Institute of California, Remote Workers, American Community Survey, Stanford, Economic Locations: San Francisco, New York, San Francisco , Washington, Los Angeles, Austin, Denver, Dallas, Nashville, Jose, Calif, Austin , Texas, N.C, Portland, Ore, Va, Conn, California, Bay Area, Washington, Ocean City, N.J, Cape Cod, Salisbury, Md, Maryland, Delaware, Fla, Stroudsburg, Pa, S.C, Panama City, Duluth, Minn
In midsized metros Metros with 250,000 to one million residents. An Emerging Divide Mobility has risen for college-educated workers, even as it has fallen for workers without a degree. College-educated workers leaving the most expensive parts of the country are also not spreading out equally everywhere — or even going to parts of the country that are struggling. Net migration among college graduates Loss Gain Among the 12 most expensive metros, net college migration has generally declined or turned negative. “Consumer cities,” as she puts it, are increasingly replacing “producer cities” as the places where college graduates want to live.
The Population of California Declined, Again
  + stars: | 2023-05-03 | by ( Soumya Karlamangla | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Even after three years of decline, though, California remains by far the nation’s most populous state, home to one in eight U.S. residents. Palmer, spokesman for the California Department of Finance. The primary driver of the state’s population loss has been Californians moving to other states, like Texas, Nevada, Idaho or Oregon, according to Hans Johnson, a senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California. Between July 2021 and July 2022, the net movement out of California was a record 407,000 people, he said. California has been losing residents to other states for decades, though that was usually offset by arriving immigrants, whose numbers plummeted in 2020.
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