Millions Of Americans Flee
President Biden and the Democrats need to remember that their actions have consequences.
Recent research indicates that a significant number of individuals, approximately two million, left the largest cities in America between 2020 and 2022. This suggests that the trend of relocating from urban areas to suburbs, exurbs, and smaller cities, which emerged at the start of the pandemic, has become a long-lasting and possibly concerning pattern.
According to a report released this month by the Economic Innovation Group, a nonpartisan public policy organization, over 1.2 million individuals left the major urban counties of the United States between July 2020 and July 2021. In addition, an estimated 860,000 people left these areas between July 2021 and July 2022.
Recent census data analyzed by The Hill reveals that only an influx of new immigrants prevented major cities from experiencing significant drops in population. Despite this, 17 out of the 25 largest counties in the United States still experienced a decline in population between April 2020 and July 2022, even with the presence of new immigrants.
William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution, stated that as a collective group, the metropolitan areas in the United States experienced a decline in population for the first time in at least three decades, if not longer.
The significant departure of residents from urban areas, coupled with the ongoing issue of vacant offices and an increase in crime rates, represents a substantial and potentially critical threat to the future of America’s major cities.
For leaders of large cities, the worst-case scenario would be a slow deterioration of the social fabric that had made urban areas appealing places to live and work in the modern era. This would entail a return to the urban decay experienced in previous decades, marked by increased crime rates, rising poverty, and insufficient educational opportunities in many major cities.
Kastle Systems, a company that oversees office-access security, has reported that in 10 of the biggest cities in the United States, half of all office spaces remain unoccupied, according to weekly data.
The rise of remote work and unchecked Democrat policies has brought about a significant transformation to the downtown areas of the United States, and unfortunately, the changes have not been positive.