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Dallas will be number two. It has the least amount of encumbrances; natural disaster, high prices, high heat, intense nimbyism, tax unfriendly....texas is the new California without the progressive politics and lower prices.
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I should have been more specific.
This: https://www.google.com/maps/@36.8651...7i16384!8i8192 or this: https://www.google.com/maps/@36.8568...7i13312!8i6656 is not this: https://www.google.com/maps/@36.8328...7i13312!8i6656 Trust me, I didn't get a ground-level apartment because of noise. I understand the issues. I don't think its weird Americans don't prefer Philly style row homes but I think front yards, overall, are too large. As far as actually using their yards, most people prefer privacy, you don't get that in the front yard. Also, more backyards are fenced than front yards, so people are more likely to trust their kids running around there or their dogs. Point? People use their backyards more, we all know this. Most people anyways. So the huge football field front yard makes zero sense to me. |
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Texas definitely has the space to continue to grow rapidly this century. |
^^^^^
Too much size. The state is bigger than France. |
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Californians leaving California seem to think Texas is the next best thing. That was their top destination last year. Of the nearly 700k people who left, 10 percent ended up in Texas. Business also sees the writing on the wall as more and companies move their headquarters and large office dependent operations. I read somewhere genentech laid off about 300 workers in the south bay. Guess where 300 new genentech workers magically ended up? Portland , two floors below me where office space is a third of bay area prices....
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This stuff always gets blown out to fit certain poster's narratives.
So out of 40 million people, 70,000 people moved to Texas? Whats 700,000 out of 40 million? Whats the percentage of these things? If you listen to certain "media" you would believe these numbers would be MUCH HIGHER than they actually are. As Diamondpark stats showed, Texas didn't even gain 1 more percent of job growth for this decade than California. I believe Idaho was the first choice for Californians's, if you go by percentage. |
Depends on what time frame those 700,000 left. If it's within a year, that's a lot even for California's population. If it's over a 5-10 period, not so much of a big deal.
RE: Idaho v. Texas, I would imagine Californians who pick one over the other do it for very different reasons. ID strikes me as a destination for more well-to-do Californians who reject CA's 'liberalism' or looking for slower pace of life where as Texas is just an affordable alternative regardless of politics. |
It was for one year, but 500,000 moved in from other states too.
Texas, New York and Florida also had 450,000 people move out last year. By percentage,Florida and New York have more people leave than california. |
I think the listed cities will grow but the real emphasis in the next decade will be on the 2nd tier of cities. Nashville, Charlotte, & Austin are already beginning to siphon off projects and construction that a couple of decades ago would never have considered them in the running. As an example Nashville scores huge with part of the Amazon expansion. Twenty years ago Atlanta or Dallas or Houston would have easily scored it. My point is instead of one of the historically larger cities continuing exponential growth many companies are looking to these second tier cities as having more potential.
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List of U.S. states annual net domestic migration. 1] Florida -- 132,602 2] Arizona -- 83,240 3] Texas -- 82,569 4] North Carolina -- 66,991 5] South Carolina -- 50,775 6] Nevada -- 47,596 7] Washington -- 46,549 8] Colorado -- 43,293 9] Georgia -- 41,914 10] Tennessee -- 39,952 ----- Here's the negative net domestic states: 24] Vermont −62 25] District of Columbia −936 26] Wisconsin −1,011 27] North Dakota −2,379 28] Rhode Island −2,639 29] Missouri −2,790 30] Iowa −2,886 31] Nebraska −3,314 32] Wyoming −3,686 33] Oklahoma −4,474 34] New Mexico −5,851 35] West Virginia −7,029 36] Virginia −9,831 37] Alaska −10,752 38] Mississippi −10,818 39] Ohio −12,146 40] Hawaii −12,430 41] Kansas −12,564 42] Michigan −16,766 43] Pennsylvania −20,463 44] Connecticut −21,509 45] Maryland −24,518 46] Massachusetts −25,755 47] Louisiana −27,914 48] New Jersey −50,591 49] Illinois −114,154 50] California −156,068 51] New York −180,306 And here's the top 3 states Net International Migration: 1] Florida 175,670 2] California 117,797 3] Texas 104,976 |
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