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19 Kommentare

  1. People are leaving expensive, densely populated states and moving toward more affordable, fast-growing regions.

  2. California and New York can bounce back if they ever decide to truly reform zoning.

    Don’t know how West Virginia will ever recover.

  3. As someone from the Midwest I’d love to live in Chicago or even New York but I will probably never be able to afford it and keep the decent standard of living I’m used to.

    Shame 🤷‍♂️

  4. Texas and Florida are probably a bit misleading. Census estimates use new home building permits as a key factor getting these numbers. Lots of new builds in Florida that are a tough sell right now sitting empty or never built after the permit is issued. The 2020 census revealed serious issues with estimate methods. New York was projected to lose population and actually gained 800,000+ people.

  5. leverich1991 on

    This map is a wet dream for the GOP, in 2030 they’ll waste no time reallocating electoral votes.

  6. peaches4leon on

    I saw another Map on GDP evolution and it was almost exactly the same lol

  7. FEMA_Camp_Survivor on

    Louisiana is worse than Mississippi and Alabama? What happened? 

  8. ChiliConCairney on

    Why make the steps on the scale so uneven? Intervals of 2 points on the positive side but randomly switching to half points on the negative, so they all sit in the same bucket? When you could have easily made it one point steps on the negative side so both colours could be used?!? Baffling choice tbh

  9. I can’t think of two states I’d less like to live in than Florida and Texas.

    People are weird.

  10. ItchySignal5558 on

    Me and my family contributed to those decreases in California and increases in Idaho.

  11. This is crazy. Nevada and Arizona are on the verge of collapse. Climate change will turn these states into refugees. I wonder if the new residents are aware of that.

  12. Illinois loss is downstate, the Chicago suburbs and exurbs are still doing quite well

    Texas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Arizona are poised to undergo tremendous growth over the next 20 years.

    But I don’t think we will ever have any other state join the 20 million club in our lifetime. We have the Big 4 (California, Texas, Florida, New York). I don’t see a fifth state joining those ranks. PA and IL seem pretty locked at 13 million. Georgia and North Carolina are growing fast and will reach that level in another 20 years. Arizona is a wildcard even though its growth is fast, it would have so far to go since it only has 8 million. I can’t imagine Arizona more than doubling in population…. That would be insane

  13. Texas and Florida gaining population based solely on no state income tax and cheap housing. People are gonna find out that property tax is through the roof, houses are terribly constructed with piss poor materials and the overall vibe in both states completely blows.

  14. I’d be interested to know who is moving to South Carolina causing that change and if it can make the state electorally competitive.

  15. GreenGorilla8232 on

    It’s amazing how many people want to live in some souless suburb of Texas with highways and strip malls everywhere and the sun beating down on them. 

    I’ll never understand the appeal. 

  16. whineybubbles on

    Everyone talks about how much they hate Texas but they keep moving here

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