For the first time since before 1965, the US is experiencing a net outflow of people—more folks are leaving than arriving. This demographic shift marks a significant turning point that economists and market watchers are keeping a close eye on. Whether it's inflation concerns, economic uncertainty, or changing migration patterns, such structural changes in population dynamics typically have ripple effects across markets and asset allocation strategies.
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AlwaysQuestioning
· 01-11 20:44
Is the US experiencing population outflow? Now capital is really starting to move elsewhere, it feels like asset allocation needs to be reshuffled.
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BridgeJumper
· 01-10 22:28
Net outflow of the US population? Now this gets interesting. Everyone's leaving, so what are those who stay going to do...
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BrokenDAO
· 01-10 16:35
Population outflow boils down to the collapse of the incentive mechanism—who would stay and struggle for the illusory American Dream? It's the same logic as DAO governance—when incentives are twisted to the extreme, people vote with their feet.
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CryingOldWallet
· 01-08 22:04
Americans are starting to flee, and now economists won't be able to stay still, haha.
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WalletDoomsDay
· 01-08 22:04
Americans are starting to flee... the market is going to shake now.
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PessimisticLayer
· 01-08 21:52
Net outflow of the US population... Now asset allocation needs to be recalculated, but I bet five dollars that most retail investors are still in a daze.
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CommunityJanitor
· 01-08 21:45
Everyone is starting to flee, how desperate must that be…
For the first time since before 1965, the US is experiencing a net outflow of people—more folks are leaving than arriving. This demographic shift marks a significant turning point that economists and market watchers are keeping a close eye on. Whether it's inflation concerns, economic uncertainty, or changing migration patterns, such structural changes in population dynamics typically have ripple effects across markets and asset allocation strategies.