WASHINGTON — The number of Americans who moved declined sharply last year, reaching the lowest percentage in 60 years as people grappled with fewer jobs and tighter credit.
Roughly 11.9 percent of the nation’s population — or 35.2 million people — moved to a new home, down from 13.2 percent the previous year, according to census data released Wednesday. It was the sharpest percentage drop in U.S. mobility since the 2000 bursting of the tech bubble.
The levels of people moving have been declining for decades, more recently due to an aging boomer population that is less mobile, since hitting a peak of 21 percent in 1951. But the rate had generally leveled off at around 13 to 14 percent before last year’s drop.
Longer-distance moves between states have dropped 36 percent since 2005 to about 4.7 million, reflecting the housing downturn.
Few move to suburbs
William Frey, a demographer at Brookings Institution, said declining U.S. migration to residential magnets in the suburbs and exurbs, and particularly in the Sunbelt, were driving the low moving rates overall.
"It’s a combination of the inability to buy or sell homes, locally, as well as a drying up of jobs particularly in hot housing markets,” he said. "The lure of the suburbs for immigrants, in particular, has been curtailed as homeownership there has proved to be elusive.”
Minorities and poor people were more likely to move than whites, according to the data. Immigrants increasingly headed to urban areas rather than the suburbs compared to years past, underscoring government concerns that these groups will prove difficult to count.
by the associated press
Roughly 11.9 percent of the nation’s population — or 35.2 million people — moved to a new home, down from 13.2 percent the previous year, according to census data released Wednesday. It was the sharpest percentage drop in U.S. mobility since the 2000 bursting of the tech bubble.
The levels of people moving have been declining for decades, more recently due to an aging boomer population that is less mobile, since hitting a peak of 21 percent in 1951. But the rate had generally leveled off at around 13 to 14 percent before last year’s drop.
Longer-distance moves between states have dropped 36 percent since 2005 to about 4.7 million, reflecting the housing downturn.
Few move to suburbs
William Frey, a demographer at Brookings Institution, said declining U.S. migration to residential magnets in the suburbs and exurbs, and particularly in the Sunbelt, were driving the low moving rates overall.
"It’s a combination of the inability to buy or sell homes, locally, as well as a drying up of jobs particularly in hot housing markets,” he said. "The lure of the suburbs for immigrants, in particular, has been curtailed as homeownership there has proved to be elusive.”
Minorities and poor people were more likely to move than whites, according to the data. Immigrants increasingly headed to urban areas rather than the suburbs compared to years past, underscoring government concerns that these groups will prove difficult to count.
by the associated press
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