Sep 1, 2024 - Politics & Policy
Why we stopped moving
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The share of Americans moving has reached its lowest point in history — and doesn't look like it's climbing back up anytime soon, Axios' Erica Pandey reports.
- Why it matters: Moving — across town, across the state or across the country — for new jobs and better lives was once a common part of American life. Now, staying put longer is the norm.
🧮 By the numbers: In the 1960s, around 20% of Americans moved each year, according to the Brookings Institution.
- As of 2022, that's fallen to 8.7% — even with all the pandemic-era moves out of big coastal cities into the Sun Belt.
Breaking it down: A collision of key demographic, social and economic trends is driving the decline, William Frey, senior demographer at Brookings, tells Axios.
- Younger people, who are responsible for the bulk of local, inter-county moves, are living with their parents for longer and delaying marriage and starting families.
- America as a whole is aging. The population is older and less likely to move.
- Labor markets have become less segmented by region and, in some cases, more remote. So techies don't necessarily have to move to Silicon Valley, and autoworkers don't necessarily have to move to Detroit.
- The typical household no longer has one earner. Looking for two or more new jobs in new places is harder than looking for one.
- Sky-high housing prices are keeping people from moving into new homes or buying their first homes.
