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People leaving the state have lower incomes and education levels than those moving in, with the state's high housing costs frequently cited as a reason for leaving. Yet census data suggest housing costs also drive migration within the state, with potential consequences for income patterns across California.
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Read More »California’s population growth slowed and then reversed over the last few years, driven by declining birth rates and immigration, COVID’s unusually high death toll, and accelerating migration to other states. This last driver has received a lot of attention. People leaving the state have lower incomes and education levels than those moving in, with the state’s high housing costs frequently cited as a reason for leaving. Yet census data suggest housing costs also drive migration within the state, with potential consequences for income patterns across California. It stands to reason that most Californians moving to less expensive states are leaving the areas where housing costs are highest. That is, the major coastal metros of the Bay Area, Los Angeles, and San Diego would lose proportionately more people to other states and less expensive regions than would the cheaper interior. But every region is a loser when it comes to net migration out of California: more people leave each region for another state than arrive into it from another state. The rate of loss is somewhat lower along the Central Coast and the San Joaquin Valley, but the differences are not large—the far eastern border has an especially high outflow rate, but also very few people. Though rates across the state are comparable, it is worth noting that the large sizes of the Bay Area and Los Angeles make those regions account for 43% of the 3.3 million people who have left the state. Housing costs more obviously drive migration within the state. Expensive coastal metros have been net donors to other areas of California, while all other regions have gained more intrastate movers than they have lost. These numbers reflect dynamics through 2020; the pattern may have accelerated during the COVID pandemic. Housing costs still play a role in departures from California, as costs are high all over the state relative to many of the primary destinations of out migrants, like Arizona or Texas. For almost any location in California, people can find a comparable and cheaper alternative in another state. This likely creates an incentive to leave California, but the draw of strong job markets in places such as San Francisco can still attract people, and may offset the rate of out-migration for the expensive coastal regions. Leaving the state entirely is also a big decision that affects more than changing location. Moving across state lines usually involves changing jobs or putting social networks out of reach. Moving within state is less disruptive, and so may end up more determined by housing costs. The pattern between states and within California suggests that a geographic polarization of income may be occurring—with income differences growing between regions but shrinking within each region. California is slowly sorting into a higher-education, higher-income state—and within the state, people are leaving higher-income regions in favor of lower-income ones. The downstream effects might be significant for policy, resource planning, and politics.
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Read More »The biggest earthquake ever recorded, of magnitude 9.5, happened in 1960 in Chile, at a subduction zone where the Pacific plate dives under the South American plate.
Earthquakes have been instrumentally recorded since the end of the 19th century only. Older earthquakes’ magnitudes are therefore just estimates. The biggest earthquake ever recorded, of magnitude 9.5, happened in 1960 in Chile, at a subduction zone where the Pacific plate dives under the South American plate. The second biggest earthquake had a magnitude 9.2 and happened in 1964 in Alaska, at another subduction zone where the Pacific plate dives under the North American plate. The infamous 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, which triggered a devastating tsunami that claimed a quarter million lives, was also at a subduction zone and of a magnitude 9.2. The biggest earthquakes are not necessarily the deadliest ones. For example, the 1976 Tangshan earthquake in China, of magnitude 7 only, was a lot less powerful than the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, but caused about the same number of casualties. On the other hand, the biggest earthquake ever recorded caused very few casualties. In fact, many conditions influence the death toll during such catastrophes: the depth of the earthquake, the distance to the densely populated areas, and the site response. The site response is the way one given location has to react to seismic waves: some places, because of their geological structure, shake more than others.
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