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While the best state to retire in the U.S. is also one of the smallest in the country, the worst state to retire is the largest. Alaska ranks as the worst state in the U.S. to retire for the third year in a row, according to Bankrate's study of the best states to retire in 2024. If you're looking for space to spread out during retirement, Alaska is the largest U.S. state by land area. However, it state ranked poorly across a number of Bankrate's measurements. Here are the 10 worst states to retire, according to Bankrate.
Persons: Bankrate Organizations: Council for Community, Economic Research, U.S . Census Bureau, Tax Foundation, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration Locations: U.S, Alaska
1 rental market in America: Austin, TexasAustin in the Austin-Round Rock, Texas metro area ranked as the top rental market, according to Realtor.com. 10 best rental markets in AmericaAustin, Texas Oklahoma City, Okla. Birmingham, Ala. San Antonio, Texas Minneapolis, Minn. Sandy Springs, Ga. Nashville, Tenn. Kansas City, Kan. Raleigh, N.C. Norfolk, Va. Oklahoma City is the No. The Oklahoma capital had a rent-to-income ratio of 17.7%, making it the most affordable rental market among the top 10. Oklahoma City is also one of the best cities for new college graduates, according to a June Zumper report. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Marcus Elwell | Moment | Getty Images
Persons: Realtor.com, didn't, Austin , Texas Austin, Austin, Oklahoma City , Oklahoma Marcus Elwell Organizations: Midwest . Cities, Austin, Getty, U.S, San Francisco and New, Google, Apple, America Austin , Texas Oklahoma City, Va . Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, . Census Bureau Locations: United States, Cities, Northeast, Northwest, New York City, Los Angeles, South, Midwest, Austin , Texas, Nashville , Tennessee, America, Austin, , Texas, Austin , TX, San Francisco and, San Francisco and New York City, The Texas, WalletHub, America Austin , Texas Oklahoma, Okla, Birmingham, Ala, San Antonio , Texas Minneapolis, Minn, Sandy Springs, Ga, Nashville, Tenn . Kansas City, Kan . Raleigh, N.C . Norfolk, Va . Oklahoma, U.S, Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma City , Oklahoma
Romona Smith, 20, Nashville, Tennessee Undergraduate subsidizing her college costs with shifts at Kroger and McDonald’s. “Me working wasn’t enough,” said Smith, who described the latter experience as strengthening her resolve. Living situation: Spending the summer rent-free with her college roommate and family in their five-bedroom home in Corona. Romona Smith, 20, NashvilleSmith is pursuing a double major in social work and psychology, along with a certification as a registered behavior technician to work with people with ADHD or autism. With her out-of-pocket tuition set to hit nearly $5,000 this fall, Smith wants to avoid another financial Hail Mary.
Persons: Romona Smith, Trump, , Smith, , “ I’m, it’s, she’ll, , who’s, I’m, Nashville Smith, She’s, she’s, Kamala Harris, Z, ” Smith, Mary, “ I’ve, haven’t, don’t Organizations: NBC, Kroger, McDonald’s, Tennessee State University, Pell, Seattle native’s, Democratic, Bank of America, American Locations: Nashville , Tennessee, Nashville, Corona , California, Corona ., Tennessee,
So we don’t know what specifically will happen in the next 100 days until Election Day on November 5, or what could come after, when the country’s unique Electoral College process gets going. December: Electoral votes are castAfter questions about the election are settled, states confirm, or ascertain, their statewide results. Electors gather in their respective state capitols to cast electoral votes for their statewide winner. Nebraska and Maine also allocate some electoral votes by congressional district, and these could be pivotal in a close race. In any event, lawmakers gather on January 6, as everyone should remember from 2020, to count electoral votes.
Persons: CNN —, Joe Biden’s, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Harris, Jeff Zeleny, Sen, JD Vance, Trump’s, He’d, Biden, Vance, Trump, Maya Rudolph, Harris –, isn’t Organizations: CNN, Democratic Party, Biden, Democrats, Republican, Trump, ABC News, ABC, Fox News, Supreme, that’s, Electors, Nebraska, Electoral College, Electoral Locations: Chicago, Harris, North Carolina, Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Maine
Where inflation is the highest and lowest in America
  + stars: | 2024-07-28 | by ( Bryan Mena | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
The Honolulu metro area in Hawaii, meanwhile, saw the nation’s highest annual inflation rate in May, at 5.2%. Housing costs have therefore eased over the past year, tugging inflation overall much lower. Tight housing-market conditions are also plaguing New York, which at one point boasted the lowest inflation rate in the country. Housing costs make up about a third of the Labor Department’s CPI, a closely watched inflation gauge. Inflation is down substantially from the 40-year highs of two years ago, but housing costs have remained stubbornly elevated.
Persons: , Barbara Denham, Brian Adcock, Willy Nunn, homebuilding, Adcock, , Jane Castor, it’s, homebuilders, Carl Bonham, Mengshin Lin, Roseann Freitas, ” Freitas, Freitas, Josh Green Organizations: Washington CNN, Consumer, Nationwide, Aloha State, Oxford, Labor Department’s CPI, Federal, Boomers, Tampa Bay Chamber, Miami, Tampa, Homes, CNN, ” Tampa, Urban, University of Hawaii, Washington Post, Building Industry Association of Hawaii Locations: The Tampa, St, Petersburg, Clearwater, Florida, Honolulu, Hawaii, Tampa Bay, homebuilding, Houston , Minneapolis, Denver, Central Florida, New York, Tampa The Tampa, Tampa, Hillsborough County, Pasco County, Miami, , Urban Hawaii, Lahaina , Hawaii, Lahaina
The best state to retire in 2024 is also one of the smallest in the U.S.At around 96 miles long and 35 miles wide, Delaware ranks as the No. 1 state to retire this year, according to Bankrate's list of the best states to retire for 2024. Last year, it placed second behind Iowa on Bankrate's list. To compile the ranking, Bankrate analyzed data from several sources, including the Tax Foundation, the Council for Community and Economic Research, the U.S. Census Bureau and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Bankrate evaluated all 50 states across five weighted categories:Affordability (40%): Includes factors such as cost of living and state and local sales tax ratesIncludes factors such as cost of living and state and local sales tax rates Overall well-being (25%) : Looks at factors such as the number of arts and entertainment centers and the number of adults over 62: Looks at factors such as the number of arts and entertainment centers and the number of adults over 62 Quality and cost of health care (20%): Considers factors such as the number of health-care establishments and the cost of health careConsiders factors such as the number of health-care establishments and the cost of health care Weather (10%): Evaluates the average annual temperature and average number of tornado strikes, earthquakes and hurricane landfallsEvaluates the average annual temperature and average number of tornado strikes, earthquakes and hurricane landfalls Crime (5%): Includes factors such as the number of violent crimes and property crimesHere are the 10 best states to retire in 2024, according to Bankrate.
Persons: Bankrate Organizations: Iowa, Tax Foundation, for Community, Economic Research, U.S . Census, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration Locations: U.S, Delaware
In June, the financial services company WalletHub ranked the 50 states and DC across three categories: economic activity, economic health, and innovation potential. The Economic Policy Institute pointed to low minimum wages and unionization rates in Southern states as two factors keeping pay down. Of course, workers in some Southern states earn less than others. Using US Bureau of Economic Analysis and Bureau of Labor Statistics data, the analysis highlighted the average annual wages across US states as of 2022. Only two Southern states — Louisiana and West Virginia — were among the eight US states that saw their populations decline between 2022 and 2023.
Persons: , Jacob Funk Kirkegaard, Chandra Childers, it's, West Virginia — Organizations: Service, West Virginia —, of Columbia, WalletHub, Business, South :, Workers, Economic Policy Institute, Southern, Economic, Economic Innovation, Peterson Institute for International Economics, of, of Labor Statistics, Institute, Texans, Dallas Fed Locations: Southern, Delaware , Maryland, Virginia, West, South, South : Mississippi, West Virginia , Arkansas , Louisiana, Kentucky, West Virginia , Arkansas , Alabama, South Carolina, Houston, Dallas, Miami, Nashville, Midwest, Mississippi, Hawaii, Texas, North Carolina, Georgia, South : Texas, Florida, North Carolina , Georgia, Tennessee, — Louisiana, West Virginia
Read previewAffordable homes are already rare in this cutthroat housing market, so finding a fairly priced property in a city with promising job prospects may seem like an impossible task. While property prices are no longer surging, they're still elevated, as are mortgage rates. "In-demand, affordable markets, such as those on the Wall Street Journal/Realtor.com Housing Market Ranking list, have seen prices climb, especially high relative to pre-pandemic prices." Homes in those standout cities also cost 6% more than last year, while the rest of the US had flat home prices. Within that group, there were 16 real-estate markets where homes were at least $150,000 less than the national average that also had an unemployment rate at or below 4%.
Persons: , Realtor.com, Hannah Jones, Danielle Hale, Jones, Hale Organizations: Service, Business, Street Journal, National Association of Realtors, Wall Street Locations: Realtor.com
This month, ApartmentAdvisor released its annual report on the best cities for renters in the United States. The report analyzed 98 major cities across the country based on:Renter friendliness scoreRenting quality scoreEconomic scoreDesirability scoreRenter friendliness and renting quality scores were determined by demand, vacant rates, tenant protection laws and new residential construction. The desirability score is based on public transit and entertainment, while the economic score was determined by analyzing the median income-to-median rent ratio, rental property price trends, and unemployment rates. The cities were scored on a 100% scale, and the data used to rank them is from the U.S. Census Bureau, ApartmentAdvisor, Walkscore, and Yelp. ApartmentAdvisor considered only the median one-bedroom monthly rent for this report.
Persons: ApartmentAdvisor Organizations: U.S . Census Locations: United States, U.S
What the LIFT Act would mean todaySince the LIFT Act was first proposed in 2018, the cost of living has only sky-rocketed, hitting working-class Americans especially hard. But a tax credit like LIFT would also be extremely costly, according to Tax Policy Center estimates from 2018 and 2019. However, funding such a tax credit now could be tough amid growing concerns over the federal budget deficit. Focus on the child tax creditLIFT was first proposed years before Congress temporarily expanded the child tax credit during the Covid-19 pandemic, which could now be a bigger priority, experts say. The American Rescue Plan boosted the child tax credit to $3,000 from $2,000, with an extra $600 for children under age 6 for 2021, and families received up to half upfront via monthly payments.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Kevin Mohatt, Francesco D'Acunto, Biden, Karl Widerquist, Jacob Channel, Tomas Philipson, Laura Veldkamp, Harris, Donald Trump Organizations: West Allis Central High School, Reuters, Georgetown University, D'Acunto, Plus, White House Council, Economic Advisers, Columbia University Business School, American Rescue Plan, Columbia University, . Census Locations: West Allis , Wisconsin
San Juan (AP) — Puerto Rico’s governor signed a law on Wednesday that prohibits discrimination against people wearing Afros, curls, locs, twists, braids and other hairstyles in the racially diverse U.S. territory. The move was celebrated by those who had long demanded explicit protection related to work, housing, education and public services. “It’s a victory for generations to come,” Welmo Romero Joseph, a community facilitator with the nonprofit Taller Salud, said in an interview. A bronze statue of San Juan Bautista stands in front the Capitol building flanked by U.S. and Puerto Rican flags, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where a ruling was made on Wednesday to ban hair discrimination. “Unfortunately, people identified as Black or Afro descendant in Puerto Rico still face derogatory treatment, deprivation of opportunities, marginalization, exclusion and all kinds of discrimination,” the law signed Wednesday states.
Persons: ” Welmo Romero Joseph, Romero, San Juan Bautista, Ricardo Arduengo, , ” Westend61 Organizations: Puerto Rico’s, Salud, Civil, U.S, Puerto, Census, Economic Policy Institute, U.S . House, Democratic Locations: Juan, Puerto, Alabama, San Juan, Puerto Rican, San Juan , Puerto Rico, U.S, Puerto Ricans, Puerto Rico, Texas
When the white Gen X child turned 27 in 2005, they could expect to make more than $34,000. But Mr. Cain did have a strong community — which he said taught him entrepreneurship and showed him he could dream big. Mr. Cain, 35, got a two-year degree in business management and first worked as a bank teller and financial adviser. At the same time, white millennials born to poor parents had a harder time than their white Gen X counterparts. Unlike Mr. Cain, Mr. Brown did not have a strong sense of community, as he bounced between his mother, his father and his grandparents.
Persons: Lawrence Cain Jr, Cain, , Asa Featherstone, Black, Derek Brown, Brown, He’s, , It’s, ” Mr, Raj Chetty, Stefanie A, DeLuca, David B, Ralph Richard Banks, wasn’t, Benjamin Goldman, Cain’s Organizations: Abundance University, Business, Harvard, The New York Times, General Electric, Richer, Johns Hopkins University, Stanford, People, Black, White, Conservatives, Local, Bank of America Locations: Cincinnati, Northside, America, United States, American, China, India, Charlotte, N.C
A New Insight into Donald Trump’s Rise
  + stars: | 2024-07-25 | by ( German Lopez | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
A common theory about Donald Trump’s appeal is that working-class white people feel they fell behind as other groups pulled ahead. He recognized the sentiment and spoke to those voters’ concerns. It turns out that those concerns are grounded in real economic changes, a new study from Harvard researchers shows. The researchers analyzed census and tax records covering 57 million children to look at people’s ability to rise to the middle and upper classes — their mobility — over two recent generations. They found that it had improved among Black people and deteriorated among poor white people, as this chart by my colleague Ashley Wu shows:
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Ashley Wu Organizations: Harvard
Specifically, the deer who live in Nara, the ancient capital outside of Kyoto that is home to a series of UNESCO-recognized historic buildings. Nara and its deer are so closely associated that the light-brown colored animals are pictured in the city’s tourism ads, on buses, train tickets and more. Carl Court/Getty ImagesNobuyuki Yamazaki of the Nara Deer Preservation Foundation told CNN that “a constant increase in the number of deer crackers eaten has resulted in more active reproduction of the deer. “As the number of deer and humans increase, so does the number of problems,” Yamazaki added. Bowing in deer is unique to Nara and has not been found in any other deer species.
Persons: Carl Court, Nobuyuki Yamazaki, ” Yamazaki, we’ve, , Yoichi Yusa, they're, Joe Biden Organizations: CNN, UNESCO, Preservation Foundation, Nara Women’s University, Mount Fuji Locations: Nara, Kyoto, Japan, Europe, Hiroshima
The worst may be over for homebuyers
  + stars: | 2024-07-23 | by ( Samantha Delouya | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +5 min
But there are now signs that maybe, just maybe, the worst could be over for homebuyers. “June, in particular, has started to show the housing market slowing down in favor of buyers,” said Skylar Olsen, Zillow’s chief economist. While the Fed doesn’t directly set mortgage rates, its actions do influence borrowing costs throughout the economy. For the past two years, potential homebuyers have faced a double whammy of high prices and high mortgage rates. “We’re sitting today at probably, if not the worst affordability ever, really close to the worst affordability ever — so we almost have nowhere to go but up,” Sharga said.
Persons: , Skylar Olsen, Green, Rick Sharga, CJ Patrick Company, “ We’re, ” Sharga, , ” Olsen, “ That’s, Sharga, Leslie Heindel, ” Heindel Organizations: CNN, homebuyers, Federal Reserve, Fed, Reserve, CJ, Homes, Wall Street Locations: New Orleans
"As they continue to annually increase their minimum wages, the number of low-wage workers does go down," says Henderson. Similarly, many states hiked their tipped minimum wages — or did away with a tipped minimum altogether. 53% of tipped wage workers earn less than $17 per hourAll that said, there are still nearly 40 million workers making less than $17 per hour. Nationwide, more than half, 53% of tipped wage workers earn less than $17 per hour, according to the report. A third, 33% of Latin or Hispanic workers and 32% of Black workers earn less than $17 per hour, compared to 21% of white workers, according to the report.
Persons: Kaitlyn Henderson, Henderson, Workers aren't, Judy Conti Organizations: Federal, Health, Education, Labor, Pensions, " Workers, Oxfam, Workers, Institute, National Employment Law, Bureau, National Women's Law, BLS, Agriculture, National Center, Farmworker Health, Census Bureau Locations: New York City, Washington, Maine, Oregon, EPI, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Kentucky, Texas, North Carolina, Mexico, West Virginia
And between 2020 and 2023, that seems to have been true of population growth. Celina, Texas, a city about 40 miles north of Dallas, earned the top spot as its population grew by more than 143% between 2020 and 2023. But it's the only Texas city among the 10 U.S. cities and towns that saw the biggest population drops between 2020 and 2023. The state's population has been growing steadily and faster than nearly any other state since 2000, the Census Bureau reports. Despite its position along the Southern border, domestic migration has played a slightly larger role than international migration in Texas' population growth, the agency finds.
Organizations: Lone Star State, Census, CNBC Locations: U.S, Celina , Texas, Dallas, Celina, Fulshear , Texas, Houston, Spring , Texas, Texas, South, . California, Francisco
This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. "If you're not playing with all the tools and trying to build apps on top of them, you're already obsolete," Blank told BI. "The pieces of the lean startup are just so obvious to me to be automated and then strung together. But then a lot of it won't tell you when it's not working," Blank told BI. From Blank's perspective, one side of entrepreneurship that is safe in the emerging AI world is the role of the visionary founder.
Persons: , Steve Blank, Blank, It's, it's Organizations: Service, United States Census Bureau, Business, Harvard, Modern Entrepreneurship, Stanford, Silicon, Founders
A middle class lifestyle can look different depending on where you are. In the San Francisco area, an annual income of $250,000 would classify your household as middle earners, based on 2022 Census Bureau American Community Survey data. That means middle class households there earn between $85,434 and $256,302 a year. Median household incomes in each of these areas are over $100,000 a year. Here are the ranges of middle class incomes in the 25 biggest U.S. metros:
Organizations: American, Survey, D.C, U.S, metros Locations: San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley , California, U.S, Washington, Seattle, Boston
Read previewEmma Echols, 68, lives off $1,056 a month in Social Security and a part-time bus driver job in Alabama. Echols has worked since she was 12, working as a chef, a convenience store general manager, and a bus driver. "I always wanted to earn my own money," Echols said. "I always wanted to work, and at the age of 14, someone started my Social Security records for me. AdvertisementHer Social Security is $1,056 a month, a 25% reduction from her potential full benefit because she accepted payments early.
Persons: , Emma Echols, she's, Echols, I've, hasn't Organizations: Service, Social Security, Business, Survey, Security Locations: Alabama
Read previewProspective homebuyers may be better off staying on the sidelines: the housing market is on its way to a rare buying opportunity, with steep home price declines bound for key areas of the real-estate market in the coming years, according to one analyst. That's an additional ingredient on the top, which just makes it more likely that prices fall," Gerli told BI. AdvertisementThe situation in the South's housing market also bears some similarities to previous housing bubbles, Gerli noted. In key boom towns, home prices have shot up 50%-70% since the pandemic, though incomes have only risen 10%-20%, he said, citing municipal data. It'll take a long time for housing to become more affordable overall, given how overvalued the market is, Gerli said.
Persons: , Nick Gerli, Gerli, Freddie Mac, That's, Southern homebuilders, we've, it's, Redfin, Homebuyers, It's Organizations: Service, Business, National Association of Realtors, Builders Locations: Florida, Southern, Texas
California gets 54 electoral votes (it has two senators and 52 congressional districts). The winner is the candidate who gets 270 or more electoral votes. If no candidate gets to 270 electoral votes, the House of Representatives picks the winner from among the candidates who got electoral votes. The campaigns will focus more attention on the fewer than one-third of all electoral votes they consider to be up for grabs or winnable by either party. Two states, Maine and Nebraska, apportion some of their electoral votes by congressional district rather than giving all of them to the state winner.
Persons: CNN —, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, , Kristen Soltis Anderson, , Biden, Trump, Hillary Clinton Organizations: CNN, Republican, Republican National Convention, House, Electoral, District of Columbia, Wisconsin –, Trump, Constitution, Democrats Locations: . Washington, California, . Texas, Florida, New York, Maine, – Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Constitution . North Carolina , Colorado, Nebraska
Read previewProspective homebuyers may be better off staying on the sidelines: the housing market is on its way to a rare buying opportunity, with steep home price declines bound for key areas of the real-estate market in the coming years, according to one analyst. That's an additional ingredient on the top, which just makes it more likely that prices fall," Gerli told BI. AdvertisementThe situation in the South's housing market also bears some similarities to previous housing bubbles, Gerli noted. In key boom towns, home prices have shot up 50%-70% since the pandemic, though incomes have only risen 10%-20%, he said, citing municipal data. It'll take a long time for housing to become more affordable overall, given how overvalued the market is, Gerli said.
Persons: , Nick Gerli, Gerli, Freddie Mac, That's, Southern homebuilders, we've, it's, Redfin, Homebuyers, It's Organizations: Service, Business, National Association of Realtors, Builders Locations: Florida, Southern, Texas
Practical purchases dominated this year's Amazon Prime Day in the US, the 48 hours of mega-discounts that generate billions in sales. Last year, consumer electronics and cosmetics were among the top Prime Day purchases, CNBC reported. Adobe Analytics forecasted before the mega-sale that this year's Prime Day would hit a record $14 billion in sales, breaking 2023's record by 10.5%. And it's too early to know what Amazon shoppers bought around the world: Some countries' Prime Day sales stretch for nearly a week, while India's Prime Day happens later this summer. "It was Christmas in July quite frankly — a bigger day than Black Friday," Brian Olsavsky, Amazon's CFO, told investors after the company's first Prime Day.
Persons: Brian Olsavsky Organizations: Business, CNBC, Amazon, Adobe, Prime, US, Health, Education, Labor, Pensions, Amazon's, US Occupational Safety, Health Administration —
Skills are "far more important" than having a college degree for many jobs, he added. Dimon said JP Morgan Chase has eliminated degree requirements for most jobs at the bank and pivoted toward more skills-based hiring. About 80% of JP Morgan Chase's current roles for "experienced hires," or candidates with full-time work experience, don't require a college degree, a company spokesperson confirmed to Fortune. For context, 62% of Americans don't have a college degree, according to the latest Census data. That means degree requirements can lock out millions of job seekers with alternative qualifications from high-paying opportunities.
Persons: Jamie Dimon, Dimon, Morgan Chase, JP Morgan Chase's, It's Organizations: JPMorgan Chase, LinkedIn, Wall Street, Ivy League, McKinsey & Co, Harvard Business School's, Glass Institute, CNBC
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