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Super Commuters Take the Morning Plane

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The number of supercommuters is up significantly as a result of the drop in home prices and high unemployment. It is up 60% in Manhattan since 2002, up to 59,000 or 3% of the workforce. In the Philadelphia- New Jersey corridor- it is 7.3% according to NYU. Houston saw a large increase between 2002 and 2009. In Maricopa County near Phoenix, 131,000 people or 8.6% of the labor force supercommutes. About 13% of the workforce or 427,000 people supercommute in Texas. Prof. Mitchell Moss of New York University, defines a 100 mile plus commute to get to work as a supercommute. His work at NYU's Rudin Center for Transportation shows 1.15 million people supercommuting in 10 major U.S. metropolitan areas. Employers are showing flexibility not wanting to have to dispose off properties, and employees prefer not to uproot families.

The American Supercommuter- a byproduct of falling home prices and high unemployment in the U.S.

02/23/2012

A byproduct of declining home prices and high unemployment in the U.S. is the rising number of supercommuters- commuters who drive or fly long distances to get to work. Sometimes this means living is Boston and working in Philadelphia, living in Austin and working in Houston, or living in Phoenix and working in Menlo Park, California. For companies the flexibility means not having to be stuck with homes in cities with depressed prices, and for employees not having to sell and move when kids are finishing high school.

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Super Commuters Take the Morning Plane

BusinessWeek 02/23/2012


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