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COMMENTARY: People are following free markets to other states

by Roberto J. Gonzalez InsideSources.com June 2, 2026
by Roberto J. Gonzalez InsideSources.com June 2, 2026
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A quiet but powerful trend continues to reshape the United States’ economic and political map: Americans are moving.

They are not moving randomly. They are voting with their feet — leaving high-tax, highly regulated “blue” states for lower-tax, opportunity-driven “red” states. This migration is measurable, sustained and not stopping.

Florida and Texas continue to rank among the top destinations for inbound movers, while California ranked last for outbound migration for the sixth consecutive year. The numbers go even deeper.

Billions of dollars in income are relocating alongside people, according to the IRS. In recent years, Florida gained more than $20 billion in income from new residents, while New York and California lost billions.

This isn’t just population movement. It’s the relocation of economic power. And it’s happening at every level.

Migration trends show that Americans across income brackets are moving. Studies indicate that many relocating households are middle- and upper-middle-income earners seeking lower costs of living, better job opportunities and a more favorable business environment.

Businesses are following the same logic.

When people move, companies move. When capital moves, jobs at all levels follow. And now, the warning signs are becoming harder to ignore.

Take New York, where New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdami’s proposal for a “pied-à-terre” tax on luxury second homes has reignited concerns about the state’s approach to wealth and investment. The policy may be politically appealing to some, but the reaction it triggered tells a much bigger story.

Ken Griffin, founder of Citadel, has signaled that such policies could jeopardize a $6 billion Manhattan development project. Griffin, a recovering Chicagoan who moved major portions of his operations to Miami after Chicago’s steep decline that accelerated after COVID, has increasingly become emblematic of this broader migration of capital and confidence. For anyone tempted to over-contextualize his motivations, Griffin recently announced at a Milken Institute forum that he is doubling down on Miami.

This is how economic realignment happens — not through a single decision but through a pattern of signals. Policies that increase uncertainty, raise costs or penalize investment begin to ripple outward. Businesses reconsider expansion. Employers rethink hiring. Families reassess affordability. And increasingly, they look to states such as Florida.

In Miami, it is becoming difficult to scroll through business headlines without seeing another marquee name announcing plans to move operations, investment activity or residency to South Florida. The pattern is no longer speculative. It is visible in real time.

Florida has become a magnet not only for retirees or high-net-worth individuals but for families, entrepreneurs and workers at all levels. The appeal is straightforward: no state income tax, a business-friendly climate and policies that prioritize growth over bureaucracy.

The American Dream has never been about guarantees. It has always been about opportunity — the chance to work hard, take risks and build something better. That principle resonates across income levels, backgrounds and communities.

This is not solely a partisan argument; families don’t pay their bills with politics. It is an economic reality.

Census and tax data consistently show that Americans are gravitating toward states with lower taxes, fewer regulatory burdens and stronger job growth. The difference between states is not ideology. It is opportunity.

States that embrace free-market principles are attracting people, jobs and investment. States, and metro areas for that matter, that move in the opposite direction risk losing all three.

The proposed tax in New York is not an isolated policy. It is part of a broader pattern, one that signals to investors and residents that success may be penalized rather than encouraged.

In a country where mobility is possible, those signals matter.

The continued movement of Americans from one state to another is not just a demographic shift; it is a referendum on economic philosophy. It reflects a growing preference for environments that reward effort, reduce barriers and expand opportunity.

If policymakers want to reverse this trend, the answer is not more restrictions or higher taxes. It is a return to what has worked: free markets, limited government and policies that empower individuals to succeed.

Because at the end of the day, Americans are not chasing politics. They are chasing opportunities. And they will continue to go where they find it.

Roberto J. Gonzalez is a county commissioner in Miami and the chairman of the Safety and Health Committee. He wrote this for InsideSources.com.

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