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December 20, 2008 at 12:07 PM #318822December 22, 2008 at 10:55 AM #318856denveriteParticipant
I have been tracking uhaul rates for about 4 years, mostly to/from san diego/denver (and San antonio). I followed the largest residential moving truck rates. The ratio of the “move from” SD to “move to” for the aforementioned cities pretty much held constant at about 2.7. In early Dec 2008 that ratio dropped to around 2.1. I believe there are fewer families moving out of SD because the employment picture in destiation cities is currently not bright. Since California will probably be one of the last states to recover economically (many other states will recover earlier), it follows that outmigration will increase as the job prospects elevate in destination states.
December 22, 2008 at 10:55 AM #319206denveriteParticipantI have been tracking uhaul rates for about 4 years, mostly to/from san diego/denver (and San antonio). I followed the largest residential moving truck rates. The ratio of the “move from” SD to “move to” for the aforementioned cities pretty much held constant at about 2.7. In early Dec 2008 that ratio dropped to around 2.1. I believe there are fewer families moving out of SD because the employment picture in destiation cities is currently not bright. Since California will probably be one of the last states to recover economically (many other states will recover earlier), it follows that outmigration will increase as the job prospects elevate in destination states.
December 22, 2008 at 10:55 AM #319251denveriteParticipantI have been tracking uhaul rates for about 4 years, mostly to/from san diego/denver (and San antonio). I followed the largest residential moving truck rates. The ratio of the “move from” SD to “move to” for the aforementioned cities pretty much held constant at about 2.7. In early Dec 2008 that ratio dropped to around 2.1. I believe there are fewer families moving out of SD because the employment picture in destiation cities is currently not bright. Since California will probably be one of the last states to recover economically (many other states will recover earlier), it follows that outmigration will increase as the job prospects elevate in destination states.
December 22, 2008 at 10:55 AM #319269denveriteParticipantI have been tracking uhaul rates for about 4 years, mostly to/from san diego/denver (and San antonio). I followed the largest residential moving truck rates. The ratio of the “move from” SD to “move to” for the aforementioned cities pretty much held constant at about 2.7. In early Dec 2008 that ratio dropped to around 2.1. I believe there are fewer families moving out of SD because the employment picture in destiation cities is currently not bright. Since California will probably be one of the last states to recover economically (many other states will recover earlier), it follows that outmigration will increase as the job prospects elevate in destination states.
December 22, 2008 at 10:55 AM #319352denveriteParticipantI have been tracking uhaul rates for about 4 years, mostly to/from san diego/denver (and San antonio). I followed the largest residential moving truck rates. The ratio of the “move from” SD to “move to” for the aforementioned cities pretty much held constant at about 2.7. In early Dec 2008 that ratio dropped to around 2.1. I believe there are fewer families moving out of SD because the employment picture in destiation cities is currently not bright. Since California will probably be one of the last states to recover economically (many other states will recover earlier), it follows that outmigration will increase as the job prospects elevate in destination states.
December 22, 2008 at 11:00 AM #318866sdrealtorParticipantThe dramatic drop in the ratio simply adds another log to my point. The tide is beginning to turn here,
December 22, 2008 at 11:00 AM #319217sdrealtorParticipantThe dramatic drop in the ratio simply adds another log to my point. The tide is beginning to turn here,
December 22, 2008 at 11:00 AM #319260sdrealtorParticipantThe dramatic drop in the ratio simply adds another log to my point. The tide is beginning to turn here,
December 22, 2008 at 11:00 AM #319279sdrealtorParticipantThe dramatic drop in the ratio simply adds another log to my point. The tide is beginning to turn here,
December 22, 2008 at 11:00 AM #319362sdrealtorParticipantThe dramatic drop in the ratio simply adds another log to my point. The tide is beginning to turn here,
December 22, 2008 at 11:01 AM #318871peterbParticipantCA unemployment is 8.4% and the nation is 6.7%. So this should indicate that people may leave CA for better opportunities of employment. Unless CA stagnates and the rest of the US catches up. But that’s theory and guessing. These numbers are here and now. Both escalating.
December 22, 2008 at 11:01 AM #319222peterbParticipantCA unemployment is 8.4% and the nation is 6.7%. So this should indicate that people may leave CA for better opportunities of employment. Unless CA stagnates and the rest of the US catches up. But that’s theory and guessing. These numbers are here and now. Both escalating.
December 22, 2008 at 11:01 AM #319265peterbParticipantCA unemployment is 8.4% and the nation is 6.7%. So this should indicate that people may leave CA for better opportunities of employment. Unless CA stagnates and the rest of the US catches up. But that’s theory and guessing. These numbers are here and now. Both escalating.
December 22, 2008 at 11:01 AM #319284peterbParticipantCA unemployment is 8.4% and the nation is 6.7%. So this should indicate that people may leave CA for better opportunities of employment. Unless CA stagnates and the rest of the US catches up. But that’s theory and guessing. These numbers are here and now. Both escalating.
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