Posted Dec 19, 2024, 7:10 PM
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Registered Ugly
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Portland
Posts: 3,845
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Quote:
Originally Posted by IcedCowboyCoffee
Yes, according to these state numbers at least, New York state's population growth is hampered only by domestic outward migration. It estimates the state experienced outward domestic migration of -130k, offset by +200k in international migration and +40k more births than deaths. I'd expect some degree of reflection of this in the metro area's numbers as well.
Ranking of weighted domestic outward migration:
1. Hawaii: -645 per 100,000 people
2. New York: -609 per 100,000 people
3. California: -608 per 100,000 people
4. Alaska: -510 per 100,000 people
5. Illinois: -442 per 100,000 people
6. Massachusetts: -385 per 100,000 people
7. Louisiana: -379 per 100,000 people
8. New Jersey: -374 per 100,000 people
9. Maryland: -296 per 100,000 people
10. Mississippi: -168 per 100,000 people
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Can someone explain for my pea brain how weighted domestic outward migration differs from the US Census metric of net domestic migration (2020-2023) of New York losing 3,291 per 100,000?
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