Quote:
Originally Posted by Bonsai Tree
Also responding to all the "California is heaven" and "New York is the Capital of the World". People are leaving both California and New York because of their high taxes and shit governments, sure not at the same rate as us but nevertheless they are leaving. New York and California are becoming the permanent "lands of the snotty rich" so I don't see any reason for us to strive to become them. We have our own unique place in the US, a place that we've just failed to fully take advantage of so far.
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The people leaving here (NYC) as well as CA are not the millionaires nor people making 6+ figures. Just like Chicago, places like SF and NYC are losing households making under $125K/year but gaining households making $125K+ per year. There's only about 12 or 13 cities where this is true in the entire country - NYC, Chicago, San Francisco, DC, Boston, and San Jose to name a few. Los Angeles is actually not one of them, surprisingly (but could be on that list soon..). Saying that millionaires are leaving LA, NYC, SF, etc is just false - the people leaving these places (including Chicago) are lower class and lower/solidly middle class. Upper middle and upper class are expanding in all of these places.
Taxes in CA and NYC are already high, so couple that with a high COL and it makes sense why they would move. I've had many co-workers move from NYC to Dallas for the reason of COL + taxes, but almost all of them have young children and are finding it harder and harder to have a comfortable life, even in the suburbs of New Jersey. So they move to Texas where the housing prices are much cheaper because my division has open opportunities there. The reason why people making under $100K are being priced out is directly due to the big increases of 6+ figure households in the same areas and landlords increasing prices as a result. And the high taxation doesn't help, so they leave. Unfortunately, there are many people who don't realize that Chicago is actually a very good option for them to move to with a much lower COL and lower income taxes. Maybe property tax washes this and evens it up, but the housing prices certain drive it over in favor of Chicago. My friend bought a house in the very north end of of the Bronx for around $700K - nearly out of the city and not in Riverdale (upper middle/upper class area of the Bronx). A lot of the loss of the city of Chicago are in African American neighborhoods and are due to other factors such as less opportunities, crime, etc. Completely different than NYC, SF, etc on why they're moving even though the numbers show the same high level trend. Not talking about the white non-hispanic population declining in the suburbs - only the city.
Just for the sake of having these numbers, here is the change in households in a few cities from 2013 to 2017 of households making $200K+ - sorted by % change. Numbers are from the 5 year ACS table B19001:
Seattle: +17,472 households (+67.9%)
Portland: +7381 households (+59.67%)
Austin: +11,743 households (+59.53%)
San Francisco: +27,508 households (+56.64%)
San Jose: +19,928 households (+53.9%)
Denver: +8018 households (+51.85%)
Phoenix: +8682 households (+46.29%)
Philadelphia: +6304 households (+44.35%)
San Diego: +15,025 households (+43.02%)
Charlotte: +6842 households (+38.46%)
Houston: +16,972 households (37.41%)
DC: +11,418 households (+36.52%)
Chicago: +19,485 households (+35.76%)
Dallas: +8887 households (+33.79%)
Los Angeles: +28,313 households (+33.4%)
San Antonio: +4476 households (+32.37%)
NYC: +70,305 households (+32%)
Atlanta: +4156 households (+27.1%)
Interestingly, Chicago still outpaced Dallas by nearly 2 percentage points and was behind Houston by a little under 2 percentage points. Atlanta the lowest of here.
Not saying it's a good thing - it's not good actually all in all, but people who are comfortable or people with money are not getting driven away from any of these places right now. And yes, I don't think that taxing the "rich" is going to even come close to solving Illinois' problem. It might help you get some extra money but it's not going to even come remotely close. There has to be like 50 different things that happen to fix this whole thing if they're trying to steer clear of bankruptcy. Tax increases, at least on residents or ones that affect residents, probably will not come close to fixing it so I agree that it's not a solution at all.