The Honky Tonk Man wrote:You people need to stop lumping the rest of Florida in with Miami...
I live 15 miles from Miami but I might as well live on the moon it's so different.. There are so many great towns in Florida but your avg Miami person can't name you anything outside of Tampa and Orlando..
Example, Sarasota is a great little town. Plenty to do, cool beach scene, affordable etc...
If you want to come to Miami to party then knock yourself out but if you plan on growing up and starting a family I'd look elsewhere in Florida, but Florida is still a great place to live.
There is no story telling here. No one is saying not to come- but you need to make hard decisions on not base your move on
great little town and cool beach scene.... which is what got people into this mess in the first place.
http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/w ... ge/1159960"A lot of people who moved to Florida to work during the construction boom were unskilled workers, and it's just very hard for those folks to find new work," said Mark Vitner, a senior economist with Wells Fargo.
"Manufacturing in the country is doing great," said Hank Fishkind, a central Florida economist and head of Fishkind & Associates. "Unfortunately, in Florida most of our manufacturing is related to the housing industry: concrete blocks, door frames, milling, that kind of stuff … And our manufacturing is not going to recover until our housing recovers."
Lost government jobs: Local and state governments in hard-hit states like Florida are under the most pressure to cut jobs and slash services in hopes of balancing their budgets.
Lower average wages: Many of the newly created jobs pay less than the ones lost. Florida has lost construction, government and financial services jobs while it gained a little ground in retail, tourism and health care (primarily lower-paid home health aides and clinic workers).
Trapped in a vicious cycle: With a higher unemployment rate than most states, many Floridians have less disposable income to spend at restaurants and shops. Those businesses then require fewer employees. That forces some to lay off workers or to close. Which leads to more unemployed.