awm, on 2020-November-17, 12:15, said:
If we double-down on this by having the government provide tax incentives for firms to allow working remotely, we might find that a lot of city dwellers actually prefer to move out into small towns or rural areas. The same 100k/year salary that seems meager in Manhattan or San Francisco goes a long way in the mid-west!
Such movement could help improve our democracy by reducing the concentration of Democratic voters in the coastal cities, and the influx of spending from new, more affluent residents in some parts of the country could revitalize their economies as well. At the same time, this could reduce pressure on the sky-high housing prices in major cities, allowing the people who really want/need to live there a little breathing room.
I am really not sure about this. Last time I checked, most of my high-tech friends living in San Francisco didn't actually work in San Francisco, they worked in Palo Alto. Which (as awm of course knows) is a serious commute. Remote working post-pandemic means they can enjoy San Francisco coffee shops and bars without having to commute.
However, I also know plenty of people who moved out of San Francisco - to find a place where they can afford a slightly bigger apartment or house once they have a family.
As long as San Francisco zoning doesn't change - at first approximation it's illegal to build additional housing anywhere in the city - it's population essentially won't change. There is essentially a fixed amount of housing, and demand will only determine the price at which you can get it, not the number of people who will get it.
The same applies more or less to all major US cities.