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How Do Higher Taxes Influence Wealthy Individuals’ Relocation Decisions?

August 28, 2025
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In the ongoing debate about taxation policies and their impact on high-income earners, a recent study published in the American Journal of Sociology offers a nuanced examination of how tax rates influence the movement—or lack thereof—of top earners across state lines. The article titled “Taxing the Rich: How Incentives and Embeddedness Shape Millionaire Tax Flight” by Cristobal Young and Ithai Lurie delves deep into the dynamics of millionaire migration, exploring the interplay between economic incentives and social embeddedness within communities.

Traditionally, it has been assumed that increased taxation encourages wealthy individuals to relocate to states with more favorable fiscal climates. This notion has been repeatedly asserted by politicians and commentators, who warn that raising tax rates may inadvertently prompt an exodus of the affluent, leading to diminished tax bases and reduced economic vitality. However, Young and Lurie challenge this assumption with empirical evidence, showing that the decision to move is far more complex than simply reacting to tax rates.

Central to their analysis are two disruptive events that reshaped the socio-economic landscape for high earners in recent years: the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. The TCJA altered the federal tax structure by capping state and local tax deductions, effectively increasing the tax burden for residents in high-tax states. Meanwhile, the pandemic generated significant upheaval in daily life and social networks, providing a secondary lens to assess migration drivers.

Using comprehensive IRS data covering all top earners in the United States from 2016 through 2023, Young and Lurie systematically studied migration patterns before and after these events. The granularity of this dataset allowed them to isolate the effects of tax policy changes and pandemic-related disruptions on millionaire mobility in a way previous studies could not.

Surprisingly, the findings indicate that the TCJA’s overhaul, despite its intent to expose more income to state taxation and theoretically making relocation more appealing, did not lead to a marked increase in tax-related migration among the wealthy. This suggests that while tax incentives matter, they are often insufficient on their own to motivate a major life decision such as moving across state lines.

The real catalyst for migration, according to the study, was the COVID-19 pandemic. The extraordinary social dislocation imposed by lockdowns and shifts to remote work loosened the embeddedness of high earners in their communities. Social embeddedness, a sociological concept referring to the network of interpersonal relationships and community ties individuals develop, emerged as a significant deterrent against moving. When the pandemic temporarily disrupted these social ties, many high earners found it easier—or necessary—to reconsider their residence, contributing to a spike in migration during that period.

Intriguingly, this surge in tax migration was temporary. Once social networks began to reestablish and communities adapted to the new normal, migration levels abated, reinforcing the notion that embeddedness—far from being an abstract sociological factor—is a tangible economic constraint on mobility. For the wealthy, social capital, including family, professional connections, and local institutions, creates a “sticky” effect that mitigates pure economic calculus.

The implications of Young and Lurie’s research extend beyond academic inquiry into policy realms. The findings caution against oversimplified views that reducing state taxes alone will retain or attract high earners. Instead, a state’s competitiveness depends on a multifaceted set of factors—quality of life, effective public services, infrastructure, and vibrant community life—that collectively form the social and economic fabric.

Quality public infrastructure and services, by contributing to the embedding of residents, may serve as indirect economic retention mechanisms. High-income individuals weigh conveniences such as schooling, healthcare, transportation, and cultural amenities alongside tax rates when deciding where to live. This broader framework challenges policy makers to design holistic strategies rather than focusing narrowly on tax incentives.

Furthermore, the research underscores an emerging complexity in the modern economy. Remote work and digital connectivity now facilitate mobility in unprecedented ways, potentially weakening some traditional forms of embeddedness. However, human social networks remain resilient, and even in highly mobile geographies, ties to community matter profoundly—even for millionaires.

The article builds on the theoretical premise that economic decisions of individuals are embedded in social realities, aligning with foundational sociological theories that reject the notion of purely rational actors operating independently of social context. Embeddedness acts both as a constraint and an incentive, anchoring economic behavior in community dynamics.

This study also contributes methodologically by leveraging large-scale individual tax data to empirically quantify the effects of policy changes and social disruptions on mobility. Such granular evidence fills a gap left by prior anecdotal or survey-based research, offering policy makers robust insights into the complex migration behaviors of wealthy populations.

In conclusion, Young and Lurie’s work reorients the dialogue on millionaire migration away from a tax-centric view towards a richer understanding that incorporates the social embedding of individuals. While tax incentives play a role, they are only part of a broader constellation of factors shaping residential choice. The lived experience of social ties, community infrastructure, and quality of life signals a new frontier in understanding the geography of wealth and mobility in America.

As states compete to retain affluent residents and the economic benefits they provide, this study highlights the importance of investing not just in fiscal policy but in the social and physical environments that collectively touch the lives of their most mobile—and most valuable—citizens.


Subject of Research: Tax migration of high-income earners and the interplay between tax incentives and social embeddedness.

Article Title: Taxing the Rich: How Incentives and Embeddedness Shape Millionaire Tax Flight

Web References:
10.1086/737165

Keywords: Economics, Sociology

Tags: 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act effectsaffluent relocation trends and motivationsCOVID-19 pandemic and affluent relocationeconomic incentives for high earnershigher taxes and wealthy individualsmillionaire migration patternsnuanced analysis of tax policiessocial embeddedness and tax decisionsstate tax rates and millionaire exodustax flight and economic vitalitytax policy impact on relocationtaxation and community ties
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