Sunday, November 8, 2009, 11:31AM ET - U.S. Markets Closed.
Head to the Big Apple, and your chances of getting the corner office might not be as far off as you think.
That's because New York City tops our list as the No. 1 city for young professionals.
That likely comes as a shock to, well, no one. Many of America's best companies, as determined by Forbes rankings of the best 400 big businesses and best 200 small businesses, including financial giant Goldman Sachs and media conglomerate News Corp. are in New York. Throw in New York's bars, clubs and world-class dining, and you get a city teaming with young professionals.
San Francisco clocked in at No. 2 and Atlanta at No. 3. Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., Boston and Seattle filled spots four through seven, and Minneapolis, Philadelphia and Denver closed out the top 10.
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More from Forbes.com:
Slideshow: Best Cities for Young Professionals Slideshow: America's Worst- Paying Jobs Slideshow: America's Best- Paying Jobs |
Behind The Numbers
Our list was compiled by tracking where the graduates of top universities across the country ended up 10 years after commencement; where the best business opportunities exist; which cities had the most young and unmarried people; and which cities paid young professionals the best.
To see where graduates of elite schools chose to pursue their careers, we looked at Class of 1997 alumni location data from six elite universities across the country--Harvard, Princeton, Duke, Stanford, Northwestern and Rice. The data indicated where graduates have settled 10 years later, and where their professional lives have matured.
We then excluded alumni that remained close to school. Harvard grads in Massachusetts--nixed; Dukies who stayed in North Carolina--gone; Stanford Cardinals roosting in California--tossed. The goal: to determine which cities offer such strong opportunities for young professionals that they're willing to pick up and move across the country for them.
Some cities are bigger than others, of course. So we adjusted where elite grads ended up against overall population size to measure the respective concentrations of young professionals. This allowed smaller cities such as Portland and Austin to compete equally with heavyweights such as New York and Los Angeles.
Then we stirred the locations of prized jobs into the mix. Each year, Forbes selects America's 400 best big businesses and 200 best small businesses. We used the locations of those 600 companies to determine which cities had the best professional opportunities for the under-35 set.
Money is important too. To figure out how far yearly income will go, we measured cities' variations in starting salary using data from New York-based Mercer Human Resource Consulting and adjusted it for cost of living with our own Forbes index; the idea being that the more greenhorn grads a city can attract with a decent salary to cost of living ratio, the more likely they'll stay and develop in that area.
Of course, even the most driven young professionals need to let off steam. With that in mind, the final metric was measured which cities had the highest share of never-married people in their 20s and 30s. Never married is an important qualifier. For example, of the 40 largest cities, Salt Lake City has the third-highest population share of people ages 25 to 34, but its standing as No. 27 in the never-married category really puts a damper on the nightlife.
The bottom 10 cities were brought down by a variety of causes. Salary to cost of living submarined Miami, Norfolk, Va., and San Antonio. The inability to attract top grads and top companies hurt Detroit and Las Vegas, and all our measurements converged on Tampa, Fla., beating it down to last place on our list.
See today's average rates across the country.
| Loan Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| 30 Year Fixed | 5.13% | 5.16% |
| 15 Year Fixed | 4.70% | 4.60% |
| 1 Year ARM | 3.98% | 4.00% |
| 30 Year Fixed Jumbo | 6.06% | 6.10% |
| 5/1 ARM | 4.30% | 4.26% |
| 3/1 ARM | 4.75% | 4.80% |
| Loan Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| $30K Home Equity Loan | 8.35% | 8.39% |
| $50K Home Equity Loan | 8.36% | 8.41% |
| $75K Home Equity Loan | 8.39% | 8.44% |
| $30K HELOC | 5.24% | 5.26% |
| $50K HELOC | 4.99% | 5.00% |
| $75K HELOC | 4.99% | 5.00% |
| Loan Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| 36 Month New Car Loan | 6.90% | 6.96% |
| 48 Month New Car Loan | 7.05% | 7.12% |
| 60 Month New Car Loan | 7.11% | 7.18% |
| 36 Month Used Car Loan | 7.39% | 7.43% |
| 48 Month Used Car Loan | 7.50% | 7.51% |
| Card Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| Business Credit Cards | 9.69% | 9.69% |
| Low Interest Credit Cards | 11.91% | 11.91% |
| Cash Back Credit Cards | 12.36% | 12.36% |
| Reward Credit Cards | 12.85% | 12.85% |
| Instant Approval Credit Cards | 13.32% | 13.32% |
| Balance Transfer Credit Cards | 13.46% | 13.46% |
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