‘Not the Place to Be’: Young Professionals Are Leaving New York October 7, 2022, 10:45 AM EDT
Soaring prices for rent, meals and everything else are pushing younger workers to seek out more affordable cities as they question if the grind is worth it. Hiring for early-career professionals in New York flatlined in the spring and has been declining ever since.
Hiring for early-career professionals in New York flatlined in the spring and has been declining ever since.
Taya Thomas felt like she was living the New York City dream, walking her dog through Greenwich Village and sipping amaretto sours at Lower East Side bars. Then rents began to climb.
The 23-year-old project manager needed to find an apartment with office space for her remote job and realized she simply couldn’t afford it. She started looking at listings in Miami without seriously planning to move there — that is, until she saw all the places with in-unit washers and dryers, rooftop pools and other amenities she could never afford in New York.
In February, Thomas, who had been living paycheck to paycheck, left for the sunnier skies and low taxes in Florida. She said she’s saving 13% more of her nearly six-figure salary, which has allowed her to put more toward investments and paying off student debt.
“There’s a magic in New York that made me feel like I was meant to be there forever,” Thomas said. “But I’m at an age where I had to be realistic.”
Young professionals like Thomas have long been lured by the New York lifestyle: High-power jobs with paychecks to match, spicy rigatoni vodka dinners alongside celebrities at Carbone and nights out in the city that never sleeps. For many, living in one of the most expensive cities in the world was worth the cost. But as inflation roars, New York is losing some of its luster.
Hiring Slows
Fewer young professionals got jobs in New York City in recent months
Source: LinkedIn Note: A career starter is a member in an entry-level job that is also one of their first three jobs Hiring for early-career professionals in New York flatlined in the spring and has been declining ever since, falling roughly 30% in recent months even as the broader labor market remained robust, according to Kory Kantenga, a senior economist at LinkedIn.
That was the first slowdown in hiring for the cohort since the pandemic economic downturn, and “revealed their disproportionate exposure to the macroeconomic headwinds,” Kantenga said.
“In this case, prospects for many career starters may be tied to how these big headwinds — like inflation and a possible recession — play out,” he said.
No Money, More Problems It’s not new that New York is expensive — and neither is the exodus of people who can no longer afford it.
The cost of living was already 15% above the national average in 2020, before inflation began to climb, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Then the pandemic surge in housing costs combined with higher prices for groceries, energy bills and everything else to make the city even less affordable. Manhattan’s median rent soared by 26% year-over-year in August to $4,100, and more and more New York neighborhoods are no longer affordable without a six-figure salary.
Inflated living expenses are disproportionately painful for young people, who are more likely to rent, have lower incomes, higher student loan balances and less money saved up. Georgia Bubash, 25, says half her paycheck is spent on her $1,800 apartment in Chinatown.
“I have no savings and that terrifies me,” said Bubash, who has worked in advertising in the city since she graduated from college in 2019.
Inflation Bites
The cost of living in the New York City area has ballooned in the last 12 months
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics Note: August CPI data for the New York-Newark-Jersey City area A trip to Portugal — where a meal including a full bottle of wine cost her 13 euros ($12.69) — was a wakeup call for Bubash, who said she can’t even afford to eat out once a week in New York. After her landlord hiked her rent by $500 a month, the Pittsburgh native decided to break her lease and move back home with the hope of eventually saving enough to move abroad.
“I’m paying so much every day and it’s not living up to the expectations of what I should be getting,” she said. “New York is at a low point. It’s not the place to be anymore.”
Talent War There are other signs New York City is becoming less attractive to a new generation of workers that places a priority on disposable income and work-life balance. Some have also felt increasingly unsafe as fears of rampant crime rose during the pandemic.
More affordable pandemic boomtowns like Austin, Texas, Denver and Nashville, Tennessee, topped New York City as the fastest growing areas for early-career talent in 2021, LinkedIn reported.
Pandemic Boomtowns
Hot migration destinations were the fastest growing metro areas for entry-level talent in 2021
Some young professionals believe they no longer need to live in New York to reach their career goals. Ania Holland, 22, chose to launch her music industry career in Berlin after juggling waitressing jobs and a full course load at New York University.
The living costs in Germany were a fraction of what she paid in Brooklyn. Although living in New York had been her lifelong dream, she now has extra money to save and time outside of work to create music and organize shows at indie bars — a far cry from her friends in the city who are “working three jobs just to make rent.”
“It’s romantic to work as a waiter while you’re auditioning for Broadway or playing gigs, but you have to be realistic about what that life actually looks like,” Holland said. “I don’t recommend the burnout.
Johnnadawearsglasses t1_irfiyn6 wrote
This is a good thing. Rents will decline only when people vote with their wallets and decide to live elsewhere. Having many many interesting cities to live in is also much better culturally than having two to three places that set the cultural agenda. Much more diversity that way