The Direction the Canoes Are Paddling

At City Journal Joel Kotkin and Wendell Cox notice something interesting:

The most recent Census population estimates revealed something that the mainstream media would prefer to ignore—the slowing population growth of big cities, including New York. The New York Times, for example, trumpeted Gotham’s historically high population yet failed to mention that the city’s growth is not only dramatically slowing but also, in the case of Brooklyn, declining for the first time since 2006. New York’s rate of growth, impressive earlier in this decade, now ranks among the nation’s lowest, mostly because of rising domestic outmigration. In 2017, nearly three times as many domestic migrants left the city as in 2011. This may be one reason why rents, which have soared for a decade, have begun to flatten, though they remain at a level many potential newcomers may still find difficult to afford.

New York’s population slowdown is hardly unique. Many of the largest U.S. metropolitan areas have seen domestic outmigration surge over the last few years. The highest-percentage declines were found in Los Angeles, Chicago, New York and, remarkably, tech-heavy San Jose, which ranked worst among 53 metropolitan areas with populations above 1 million. Last year, the San Francisco Bay Area’s seven metros experienced outmigration more than ten times higher than the annual average since 2010. This includes the “boomtown” San Francisco metropolitan area, which attracted domestic migrants from 2010 through 2015 but saw strong net outmigration last year. At 0.60 percent, San Francisco’s 2017 population growth was half its post-2010 average. In 2017, population growth in Los Angeles was among the lowest in the nation, and at 0.19 percent, down two-thirds from its annual average since 2010.

California, New York, and Illinois all have net domestic outmigration. California and New York continue to grow through immigration. IMO that can be accounted for by what’s on TV.

The medium-sized and small metro areas to which people are moving are full of deplorables. Will they become less deplorable?

1 comment… add one
  • Guarneri Link

    “The medium-sized and small metro areas to which people are moving are full of deplorables.”

    Well, the migration from NYC and San Fran is just beginning, so there aren’t that many deplorables yet. nyuk, nyuk, nyuk

    The longer we are here in Naples, the more momentum you see. It used to be where Toronto-ites, IL, WI, MI, OH, and MN types came. Now, there are just as many coming from NJ, eastern PA, MA and NY. We need a wall…………

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