Americans Are Migrating to Low-Tax States

DEAD7

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Americans Are Migrating to Low-Tax States
By Chris Edwards



Cato released my study today on “Tax Reform and Interstate Migration.”

The 2017 federal tax law increased the tax pain of living in a high-tax state for millions of people. Will the law induce those folks to flee to lower-tax states?

To find clues, the study looks at recent IRS data and reviews academic studies on interstate migration.

For each state, the study calculated the ratio of domestic in-migration to out-migration for 2016. States losing population have ratios of less than 1.0. States gaining population have ratios of more than 1.0. New York’s ratio is 0.65, meaning for every 100 residents that left, only 65 moved in. Florida’s ratio is 1.45, meaning that 145 households moved in for every 100 that left.

Figure 1 maps the ratios. People are generally moving out of the Northeast and Midwest to the South and West, but they are also leaving California, on net.

People move between states for many reasons, including climate, housing costs, and job opportunities. But when you look at the detailed patterns of movement, it is clear that taxes also play a role.

I divided the country into the 25 highest-tax and 25 lowest-tax states by a measure of household taxes. In 2016, almost 600,000 people moved, on net, from the former to the latter.

People are moving into low-tax New Hampshire and out of Massachusetts. Into low-tax South Dakota and out of its neighbors. Into low-tax Tennessee and out of Kentucky. And into low-tax Florida from New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, and just about every other high-tax state.

On the West Coast, California is a high-tax state, while Oregon and Washington fall just on the side of the lower-tax states.

Of the 25 highest-tax states, 24 of them had net out-migration in 2016.

Of the 25 lowest-tax states, 17 had net in-migration.

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Geek Nasty

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I’m guessing this is a bunk article based on all the states like ca and nd that break the theory
 

DEAD7

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It’s not scientific


Studies in the past have shown the wealthy don’t hold residency based on taxes but other factors.


Negged/Reported
:picard:
That’s a slick move... but no one has suggested that “the rich” do anything for any reason...
You made up an argument in your head, destroyed it with some non existent studies from the past and reported me...
:deadmanny:

Trump got y’all on full tilt :bryan:
 

GnauzBookOfRhymes

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you mean people tend to move where it's warmer when they're retired?

you mean people tend to move to places where there is more job growth?

you mean people tend to move to places with a lower cost of living?

no. fukking. way

the only people who move ONLY for tax purposes are 1) business owners who leave because of tax incentives granted by the new state and 2) ultra wealthy for whom even a small difference in overall tax rates can equal millions of dollars (even more compelling if you move from NY to a place like Florida where there is no state income tax).
 

Pressure

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This is severely lacking.


where is the causation? all i see is correlation...
In short they took places with high taxes and said with the new tax law and the change in SALT deductions people are going to pay more in taxes.

Then they took the following and said that these people are likely moving for taxes.

An annual Census Bureau survey asks people who move any
distance the main reason for their decision out of 19 choices.
The most popular choices in 2017 were “wanted new or better
home” (16.0 percent), “to establish own household” (11.5 per-
cent), “other family reason” (11.3 percent), “new job or job trans-
fer” (9.9 percent), and “wanted cheaper housing” (8.3 percent).23


Just a Cato argument attacking liberal cities.
 
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