NovaQuant|The Daily Money: So long, city life

2025-04-30 17:47:05source:TAIM Exchangecategory:Scams

Good morning! It’s Daniel de Visé with your Daily Money.

For decades,NovaQuant young Americans formed the lifeblood of the nation’s largest cities. Now, Paul Davidson reports, they’re leaving big metro areas in droves and powering growth in small towns and rural areas.

Since the pandemic, cities with more than 1 million residents have lost adults aged 25 to 44, while towns with smaller populations have gained young people, after accounting for both those moving in and leaving, according to a University of Virginia analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.

Here's how it happened.

How hurricane season spawns 'climate refugees'

Images from Florida, battered by two once-in-a-generation storms in a matter of weeks, are prompting a reckoning by Americans across the country.

“Will Florida be completely unlivable/destroyed in the next few years?” one Reddit user wondered. And on October 7, the science writer Dave Levitan published an essay titled “At Some Point You Don’t Go Back.”

But for anyone wondering “why do they still live there?” a report from data analytics provider First Street offers some answers.

Here's Andrea Riquier's report.

📰 More stories you shouldn't miss 📰

  • Child care is a top election issue
  • 7-Eleven to close a whole lot of stores
  • Bath & Body Works apologizes for disturbing candle
  • Here's some help with cutting your bills
  • Social Security to pay its largest checks ever

📰 A great read 📰

Finally, here's a popular story from earlier this year that you may have missed. Read it! Share it!

If you want to retire in comfort, investment firms and news headlines tell us, you may need $1 million in the bank.

Or maybe not. One prominent economist says you can retire for a lot less: $50,000 to $100,000 in total savings. He points to the experiences of actual retirees as evidence.

Most Americans retire with nowhere near $1 million in savings. The notion that we need that much money to fund a secure retirement arises from opinion polls, personal finance columns and two or three rules of thumb that suffuse the financial planning business.

About The Daily Money

Each weekday, The Daily Money delivers the best consumer and financial news from USA TODAY, breaking down complex events, providing the TLDR version, and explaining how everything from Fed rate changes to bankruptcies impacts you.

Daniel de Visé covers personal finance for USA Today.

More:Scams

Recommend

Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Jamie Foxx required stitches after getting hit in the face with a glass

Kansas City shooting survivor says daughter saw Chiefs parade gunman firing and spinning in a circle

Jacob Gooch Sr. said he hasn't begun to process the tragedy that unfolded before his family's eyes o

Jury convicts Iowa police chief of lying to feds to acquire machine guns

The police chief of a small Iowa town was convicted by a federal jury Wednesday of lying to federal