• Some Californians leaving for Texas could be replaced by Texans leaving

    From Technobarbarian@21:1/5 to All on Mon Nov 27 10:00:50 2023
    "While it is known that many Californians looking to leave the Golden State often choose Texas as their new home, new statistics indicate that a growing number of Texans are making their home in California.

    Data obtained from the United States Census Bureau by the Houston Chronicle on state-to-state migration shows that California welcomed 42,279 Texans as new residents in 2022, the most of any state.

    One major motivator when it comes to relocating is how much residents are paid; according to Forbes, the average salary in Texas for 2023 is $57,300, which ranks 24th in the nation. The average Californian’s salary is $73,220, which is third highest in
    America only behind New York ($74,870) and Massachusetts ($76,600)."
    [snip]

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/californians-leaving-texas-may-replaced-231450564.html

    TB

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  • From bfh@21:1/5 to Technobarbarian on Mon Nov 27 16:15:23 2023
    Technobarbarian wrote:
    "While it is known that many Californians looking to leave the
    Golden State often choose Texas as their new home, new statistics
    indicate that a growing number of Texans are making their home in
    California.

    Data obtained from the United States Census Bureau by the Houston
    Chronicle on state-to-state migration shows that California
    welcomed 42,279 Texans as new residents in 2022, the most of any
    state.

    One major motivator when it comes to relocating is how much
    residents are paid; according to Forbes, the average salary in
    Texas for 2023 is $57,300, which ranks 24th in the nation. The
    average Californian’s salary is $73,220, which is third highest
    in America only behind New York ($74,870) and Massachusetts
    ($76,600)." [snip]

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/californians-leaving-texas-may-replaced-231450564.html

    Sort of an asymmetrical exchange - like the Israeli-Hamas
    hostage/prisoner swap.

    TX had about a 230,000 gain, while CA had 343,000 loss. Not much
    "replacement" going on there. I realize that's not just due to a TX/CA exchange, but people are bailing out of CA in greater numbers than any
    other state. However comma when you consider percent of population
    change, 9 other states had a worse loss. OTOH, only 3 other states had
    a higher gain than TX. https://www.nar.realtor/blogs/economists-outlook/where-people-moved-in-2022

    When you consider the income required to "live comfortably" - 50K for
    TX and 80K for CA - CA loses again. https://thehill.com/changing-america/respect/poverty/4179830-this-is-how-much-singles-need-to-live-comfortably-in-every-state/

    You say that Texans make 57K and Californians make 75K. That puts
    Texans 7K ahead of the game, and Californians 5K behind it - which I
    allege makes income an irrational deciding factor for moving from TX
    to CA. One can easily be tempted to speculate that it's uniquely
    possible that many of those moving from TX to CA might be dumbasses
    suffering from various intensities of MAGAphobia.

    --
    bill
    Theory don't mean squat if it don't work.

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Technobarbarian@21:1/5 to bfh on Mon Nov 27 15:21:19 2023
    On Monday, November 27, 2023 at 1:15:28 PM UTC-8, bfh wrote:
    Technobarbarian wrote:
    "While it is known that many Californians looking to leave the
    Golden State often choose Texas as their new home, new statistics
    indicate that a growing number of Texans are making their home in California.

    Data obtained from the United States Census Bureau by the Houston Chronicle on state-to-state migration shows that California
    welcomed 42,279 Texans as new residents in 2022, the most of any
    state.

    One major motivator when it comes to relocating is how much
    residents are paid; according to Forbes, the average salary in
    Texas for 2023 is $57,300, which ranks 24th in the nation. The
    average Californian’s salary is $73,220, which is third highest
    in America only behind New York ($74,870) and Massachusetts
    ($76,600)." [snip]

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/californians-leaving-texas-may-replaced-231450564.html
    Sort of an asymmetrical exchange - like the Israeli-Hamas
    hostage/prisoner swap.

    TX had about a 230,000 gain, while CA had 343,000 loss. Not much "replacement" going on there. I realize that's not just due to a TX/CA exchange, but people are bailing out of CA in greater numbers than any
    other state. However comma when you consider percent of population
    change, 9 other states had a worse loss. OTOH, only 3 other states had
    a higher gain than TX. https://www.nar.realtor/blogs/economists-outlook/where-people-moved-in-2022

    When you consider the income required to "live comfortably" - 50K for
    TX and 80K for CA - CA loses again. https://thehill.com/changing-america/respect/poverty/4179830-this-is-how-much-singles-need-to-live-comfortably-in-every-state/

    You say that Texans make 57K and Californians make 75K. That puts
    Texans 7K ahead of the game, and Californians 5K behind it - which I
    allege makes income an irrational deciding factor for moving from TX
    to CA. One can easily be tempted to speculate that it's uniquely
    possible that many of those moving from TX to CA might be dumbasses suffering from various intensities of MAGAphobia.

    --
    bill
    Theory don't mean squat if it don't work.

    I'm not saying anything. I'm just passing on a cute story. It looks like you had fun with it.

    TB

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bfh@21:1/5 to Technobarbarian on Mon Nov 27 19:17:21 2023
    Technobarbarian wrote:
    On Monday, November 27, 2023 at 1:15:28 PM UTC-8, bfh wrote:
    Technobarbarian wrote:
    "While it is known that many Californians looking to leave the
    Golden State often choose Texas as their new home, new statistics
    indicate that a growing number of Texans are making their home in
    California.

    Data obtained from the United States Census Bureau by the Houston
    Chronicle on state-to-state migration shows that California
    welcomed 42,279 Texans as new residents in 2022, the most of any
    state.

    One major motivator when it comes to relocating is how much
    residents are paid; according to Forbes, the average salary in
    Texas for 2023 is $57,300, which ranks 24th in the nation. The
    average Californian’s salary is $73,220, which is third highest
    in America only behind New York ($74,870) and Massachusetts
    ($76,600)." [snip]

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/californians-leaving-texas-may-replaced-231450564.html
    Sort of an asymmetrical exchange - like the Israeli-Hamas
    hostage/prisoner swap.

    TX had about a 230,000 gain, while CA had 343,000 loss. Not much
    "replacement" going on there. I realize that's not just due to a TX/CA
    exchange, but people are bailing out of CA in greater numbers than any
    other state. However comma when you consider percent of population
    change, 9 other states had a worse loss. OTOH, only 3 other states had
    a higher gain than TX.
    https://www.nar.realtor/blogs/economists-outlook/where-people-moved-in-2022 >>
    When you consider the income required to "live comfortably" - 50K for
    TX and 80K for CA - CA loses again.
    https://thehill.com/changing-america/respect/poverty/4179830-this-is-how-much-singles-need-to-live-comfortably-in-every-state/

    You say that Texans make 57K and Californians make 75K. That puts
    Texans 7K ahead of the game, and Californians 5K behind it - which I
    allege makes income an irrational deciding factor for moving from TX
    to CA. One can easily be tempted to speculate that it's uniquely
    possible that many of those moving from TX to CA might be dumbasses
    suffering from various intensities of MAGAphobia.

    --
    bill
    Theory don't mean squat if it don't work.

    I'm not saying anything. I'm just passing on a cute story. It looks like you had fun with it.

    Oh. Right. I forgot about that. Sorry. Carry on.

    --
    bill
    Theory don't mean squat if it don't work.

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)