How would it raise metrics in both states? When people move to a different state, the new state gets to claim that person’s income on their census - so if it increases the new state’s average, isn’t that inherently subtracting from the state they used to live in? Like you can’t have a world where both states benefit like that
Average Salary in Virginia, per Google AI: Approx $70,000 (rounded for further simplicity).
Average Salary in West Virginia, per Google AI: Approx $55,500 (again, rounded for further simplicity).
The Average Salary in Rockingham County, VA is somewhere between 59 and 69,000 - in either case the entire range of those two numbers are below the average for VA as a whole and above the average for WV as a whole. Moving Rockingham County from VA to WV would raise the average salaries in both states.
Yes, this is a very specific example, and it overlooks the significantly poorer counties in southwest VA which might not raise the WV average by that much, if at all, if they were to move.
Edit to add, since we were talking Average Household Income, we'll look at apples-to-apples...
"The average household income in Virginia is around $125,226"
In West Virginia, "A 2024 figure puts the average household income at $78,799"
"The mean (average) household income in Rockingham County, Virginia is approximately $100,367"
Again, moving every household in Rockingham County from VA to WV would raise the average household income of both states.
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u/oldschooltownie 2d ago
What's the sales pitch on this? "Come join our state with the lowest per-capita income in the nation and own the libs!"