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How Real Was the Pandemic Talent Drain?

How Real Was the Pandemic Talent Drain?

At the height of the pandemic, it was widely believed that outmigration from large cities would lead to a talent drain. Three years later, however, CBRE has published an analysis of migration data which shows that most U.S. cities have lost less than 1% of their white-collar workforces since 2020. In fact, some major metros such as New York City have even seen a net inflow in recent months!

CBRE analyzed LinkedIn Talent data to chart aggregate movement of professionals from 2020 through February 2023 and found that San Francisco lost 0.9%, Los Angeles 0.2%, and New York City 0.6%. Meanwhile many Sunbelt cities saw a net inflow including Austin (up 4%), Nashville (up 2%) and Tampa (up 2%).

The report also noted “Metro New York’s talent out-migration in the first two years of the pandemic morphed into a net talent inflow during the year ending in February 2023.” Additionally Dallas-Ft Worth Charlotte Tampa Orlando Houston all experienced higher levels on in-migration over this same period while other top destinations for tech workers like Austin Seattle Denver Phoenix Las Vegas Miami Atlanta saw lower levels or no change at all .

Chris Volney managing director at CBRE’s Americas Consulting division said “Pandemic driven out migration from major metro areas has minimally affected talent availability… Over past year rate [of] out migration [in] largest metros slowed – even reversing [in] some cases…[and] many largest markets attract[ing] younger tech & finance workers”.

Ultimately though when put into context these percentages are relatively small; for example it would take more than 80 years for Austin’s workforce to reach San Francisco’s current size with its current growth rate!

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