Published: April 22, 2009
Stranded by the nationwide slump in housing and
jobs, fewer Americans are moving, the
Census Bureau said Wednesday.
The bureau found that the number of people who
changed residences declined to 35.2 million from
March 2007 to March 2008, the lowest number since
1962, when the nation had 120 million fewer people.
Experts said the lack of mobility was of concern
on two fronts. It suggests that Americans were
unable or unwilling to follow any job opportunities
that may have existed around the country, as they
have in the past. And the lack of movement itself,
they said, could have an impact on the economy,
reducing the economic activity generated by moves.
Joseph S. Tracy, research director of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, said the lack
of mobility meant less income for movers and the
people they employ and less spending on renovation
and on durable goods like appliances. But, Dr. Tracy
said, the most troubling prospect is that people
were no longer able to relocate for work.
“The thing that would be of deeper concern is if
job-related moves are getting suppressed and workers
are not getting re-sorted to the jobs that best use
their skills,” he said. “As the labor market started
to improve, if mobility stays low, you can worry
about the allocation of workers.”
How long will the downturn in mobility last?
Michael J. Hicks, director of the Center for
Business and Economic Research at Ball State
University in Indiana, said, “I think it will be
well into next year before we see any growth in
migration, and that still may be optimistic.”
“If the stock market rebounds before the housing
market, we might see a scramble for retirement
housing,” Professor Hicks added.
The American Moving and Storage Association said
the number of people changing residences had been
dropping for four years and fell 17.7 percent from
2007 to 2008. The first quarter of 2009 is likely to
be even worse, the trade group said.
“We saw a standstill in new home construction, so
there was no domino effect from people moving,” John
Bisney, a spokesman, said. “People are a little
nervous about getting a mortgage. And the recession
is so broad-based it’s not as if you can pull up
stakes and move to a part of the country that’s
growing.”
Jed Smith, a research director for the
National Association of Realtors, said that on
average it took a homeowner 10.5 months to sell a
house in 2008 compared with 8.9 months in 2007.
“Generally speaking, people move based on the
economy,” Dr. Smith said, “and obviously the economy
in 2008 was mediocre to bad. That would tend to have
a negative impact on people’s desire, ability or
need to move.”
In its report Wednesday, the Census Bureau said
that Americans’ mobility rate, which has been
declining for decades, fell to 11.9 percent in 2008,
down from 13.2 percent the year before and setting a
post-World War II record low. Moves between states
dropped the most, to half the rate recorded at the
beginning of this decade.
In addition,
immigration from overseas was the lowest in more
than a decade, which experts attributed to the lack
of jobs. Over all, movers were more likely than
nonmovers to be unemployed, renters, poor and black.
For decades, several trends have driven a decline
in American wanderlust.
Home ownership rates have risen, and owners are
typically less likely to move than renters.
Two-earner families have become more common, and
finding employment for both spouses in a new
location can be challenging. Americans’ median age
has been climbing, and it is younger people who
usually move most often.
“It does show that the U.S. population, often
thought of as the most mobile in the developed
world, seems to have been stopped dead in its tracks
due a confluence of constraints posed by a tough
economic spell,” said William H. Frey, a demographer
with the
Brookings Institution.
Dr. Frey predicted that the foreclosure crisis
might spur more local mobility, within or between
counties, as families shift to rented quarters or
move in with relatives.
Robin Camacho, a Las Vegas real estate agent,
expressed surprise at the census mobility figures,
given the high foreclosure rates in her city. “If
people are losing their homes and tenants are being
forced to vacate,” Ms. Camacho said, “then this just
doesn’t jibe with what I intuitively think. I see
people moving constantly because they have no
choice.”
Patrick Bonnema, sales manager for Anderson
Brothers Moving and Storage in Chicago, said local
residential moves were “down drastically over the
last six months.”
“I’m not surprised this has happened,” Mr.
Bonnema said. “Look at the economy, look at the
banking industry, look at the credit industry.
People can’t move, what are they going to do? Their
homes are now worth less than what they originally
paid, and they don’t want to take a loss.”
Those surveyed by the census said they moved for
housing, family and job reasons, in that order.
Suburbs gained 2.2 million movers while major
cities lost 2 million. Immigrants, though, appeared
less likely to settle in the suburbs in 2008,
compared with recent years.
“The housing crunch and its impact on employment
in construction, plus the demise of sub-prime
lending, gave immigrants fewer opportunities for
living and working in the suburbs than in the
immediately preceding years,” Dr. Frey said.
The influx of 1.1 million overseas foreigners was
the lowest since the 780,000 in 1995.
Among movers, the South recorded the largest net
gain, but the gain was the smallest in five years.
Steve Freiss contributed reporting from Las Vegas; Rebecca Cathcart
from Los Angeles; and Lori Rotenberk from
Chicago.