Sunday, May 16, 2010

2009 UNITED VAN LINES MIGRATION STUDY

[mEDITate-OR:
move on, America...

Mobility is the essence of U.S.
- "Go West young man", and "Up or out, soldier"...

However, that was then, this is now.

Far Right, to many have been unable or unwilling to move due to their home values.
They believed..., that the RE markets would recover, it wouldn't get worse, the Govt's announced programs would work for them, that they would not also loose their jobs..., whatever.

Now they know that is simply not true. Hence the rise in strategic defaults.

This study is for last year, this years numbers probably are different.
People have and will decide that there is no reason anymore to stay stuck where they are, and are moving to where things look better for them.

And, Immigrants will leave AZ, and move to where they are more welcome.

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2009 UNITED VAN LINES MIGRATION STUDY

WESTERN REGIONS MAINTAIN GROWTH POTENTIAL
WHILE GREAT LAKE STATES CONTINUE TO SUFFER, ACCORDING TO

The entire Western region continued to witness tremendous growth in 2009, with six states capturing high-inbound move rankings. The findings are among the results of United Van Lines’ 33rd annual “migration” study, which tracks where its customers moved from and the most popular destinations over the past 12 months. The findings were announced today by Carl Walter, vice president of United Van Lines, the nation’s largest household goods mover. 


United has tracked shipment patterns annually on a state-by-state basis since 1977. For 2009, the study is based on the 143,194 interstate household moves handled by United among the 48 contiguous states and Washington D.C. United classifies the states as “high inbound” (55% or more of moves going into a state), “high outbound” (55% or more of moves coming out of a state) or “balanced.” 

MOVING IN
In 2009, the District of Columbia (67.8%) maintained its reign as the top destination in the United States for the second year in a row. While North Carolina (55.4%) was the only other Mid-Atlantic state to experience high-inbound growth, the state did fall in the migration study rankings, from the No. 3 high-inbound ranking in 2008 to the No. 10 spot in 2009.


In the Western region, six states captured high-inbound rankings. Oregon (58.9%) came in second and celebrated 22 consecutive years of high-inbound migration, while Nevada (57.2%) ranked fourth and celebrated 24 years of high-inbound migration.
In addition, Wyoming (56.3%) maintained its position from 2008 as fifth on the high-inbound list.Idaho (56.1%) and Colorado (56.0%) made their debut on the high-inbound list, ranking sixth and seventh, respectively. New Mexico (55.5%) held its own as the only Southwest state on the high-inbound list this year.
In the South, Arkansas (57.7%) rose to No. 3 on 2009’s list of highest inbound states. Both Georgia(55.6%) and Texas (55.4%) also made the inbound list, after just missing the top 10 in 2008. Most Southern states transitioned from high-inbound to more balanced migration statistics in 2009. 
MOVING OUT
The historical data pulled from United’s migration study over the past 33 years shows an ongoing outbound trend for the Great Lakes region. Michigan (68.0%) once again captured the No. 1 spot, a title held since 2006. Indiana (57.5%) also earned the distinction of being a high-outbound state, continuing a 16-year trend. Other Great Lakes states that made the high-outbound list include Illinois (58.2%, ranked No. 2 on the list), Wisconsin (56.3%) and Minnesota (56.5%).
Four Northeastern states round out this year’s high-outbound list. New Jersey (58.1%) ranked third in high-outbound states, continuing a trend that started in 1988. Pennsylvania (57.4%) came in fifth on the outbound list, an improvement over its No. 4 ranking in 2008, followed by Maine (55.6%) and New Hampshire(55.2%). 
North Dakota (57.0%) fell from its No. 2 ranking in 2008 to No. 6 on the high-outbound states list in 2009, with the number of outbound moves decreasing by about two percentage points.

BALANCED

While the majority of states are considered balanced, this year’s study revealed that six states achieved a near-perfect balance, gaining approximately the same number of residents as were lost. Those states include Massachusetts and Maryland in the Northeast region,Missouri and Nebraska in the Midwest, and California and Utah in the Western region
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