# Cities are now consumer products **Published by:** [Brandon Donnelly](https://brandondonnelly.com/) **Published on:** 2026-06-14 **Categories:** miami, dubai, cities, urbanism, globalization, migration, hnwi, wealth-migration **URL:** https://brandondonnelly.com/cities-are-now-consumer-products ## Content We keep hearing that wealthy people increasingly want to live in cities like Miami. The weather is warm and taxes are lower. But it's important to keep in mind that this is part of a larger trend. In 2024, it was estimated that approximately 128,000 millionaires would relocate abroad. Last year, the number was more than 140,000. And this year, the number is expected to top 165,000. According to Henley & Partners, this represents "the largest voluntary transfer of private capital in modern history."People and their capital are now more mobile than ever. And the result is that from Miami to Milan, something interesting has happened: cities have become consumer products that compete based on what they can offer their customers. Up until this year, Dubai seemed to have the strongest offering for millionaires, but we'll see how the Iran war impacts that going forward. As another example, the US remains a magnet for talent and capital, but:...the biggest shift is in America—home to more than a third of the world’s people worth $30m or more, according to Knight Frank, a property firm. “The US has gone from a blip to the primary market,” says Ronald Klasko, a lawyer in Philadelphia. He says that most clients are interested in moving to Europe, because they are concerned about America’s political direction, want an alternative residency or want to be able to travel without an American passport.Anecdotally, I can also say that I was speaking with a luxury real estate agent in Toronto last week and she told me that her biggest client segment by far right now is wealthy Canadians who have been living in the US for many years or even decades and have now decided to move back home. Take that for what it's worth. Of course, treating cities as transactional consumer products as opposed to deeply rooted places has its drawbacks. Global wealth migration can detach real estate values from the local economy and create banal districts for people with weak local connections. But I don't think these two things need to be mutually exclusive. Cities can and should be both global and local. The reality today is that cities cannot take their tax bases for granted. Talent and capital are more mobile than ever before. If they don't like your product, they'll shop around for another one.Cover photo by Avi Werde on Unsplash Capital flight chart from The Economist ## Publication Information - [Brandon Donnelly](https://brandondonnelly.com/): Publication homepage - [All Posts](https://brandondonnelly.com/): More posts from this publication - [RSS Feed](https://api.paragraph.com/blogs/rss/@brandondonnelly): Subscribe to updates - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/donnelly_b): Follow on Twitter