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Ten reasons why white-collar workers give up metropolis: where can they go after fleeing from Beishangguang?
"North to Guangzhou" is also called Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. When "fleeing from the north to the south" became a popular online word, some elites took the initiative to choose "strategic shift" to take care of their lives in second-tier cities after years of experience in first-tier cities. New Weekly once counted 10 reasons why "fleeing north to south" gave up metropolis. 10 The reasons are as follows: First, the first-tier cities are rivers and lakes, and the second-tier cities are Dojo. Beijing has hosted the Olympic Games, Shanghai is hosting the World Expo, and Guangzhou is about to usher in the Asian Games. Beishangguang is in sync with the world, but you are struggling to keep up with their pace. Beishangguang gets dividends by high housing prices, gathers elites by high household registration threshold, and crowds out floating population by high prices. The gathering of the strong hides economic crisis, emotional crisis and interpersonal crisis, which is indifference. Second-tier cities often take livability as a breakthrough, and successively decide individual champions of humanized life: Kunming is famous for its climate, and every day is spring; Changsha is famous for its happiness. Night shows, super girls and mango tables are all very attractive. Chengdu is famous for its ease. Once you enjoy peach blossoms, 65,438+10,000 people will go with you-in the materialistic era, first-tier cities are your main battlefield; When success becomes poison, second-tier cities are your spiritual Dojo for self-salvation. Reason 2: First-tier cities are in stock, while second-tier cities are second-tier cities of global futures brands. The network world eliminates information asymmetry, and the metropolitan area makes first-tier cities and second-tier cities become living communities. The local media began to wake up, and real estate giants turned their attention to second-tier cities-first-tier cities compete for space and second-tier cities compete for time. Choosing a rising second-tier city tests the vision of the future and the great wisdom of exchanging time for space. To find the golden mean in work and life, you should find your inner "1.5 line city". After all, they can become first-tier cities in your lifetime. Reason 3: First-tier cities fight for IQ, while second-tier cities fight for EQ. A common view is that first-tier cities have many opportunities and are relatively fair, while second-tier cities stress interpersonal relationships. But don't ignore that opportunities in first-tier cities may be false opportunities, and fairness may be false fairness ―― you think it's easier to be famous in Beijing, but it's actually just a small circle; You think your salary in Shanghai is very high, but you still can't afford a square meter house for more than a year. All cities have hidden rules. China is an acquaintance society, but all opportunities in no city can be blocked at the same time. On the other hand, first-tier cities fight for IQ, while second-tier cities fight for EQ. There is only one question left, that is, whether your EQ is higher than IQ. Reason 4: First-tier cities have culture, while second-tier cities have leisure. The survey of Advertising Daguan has confirmed this conclusion: in first-tier cities, 75% people eat from 6 pm to 8 pm; In second-and third-tier cities, 70% people go to eat from 5 pm to 7 pm. First-tier cities have white-collar culture, but white-collar workers don't have much time to enjoy it ―― if you spend 2 hours on traffic every day, then 1 year is 30 days; There are no art cinemas and small theaters in second-tier cities, but there are many leisure activities that eat earlier than you and sleep later than you. Reason 5: First-tier cities have a sense of superiority, while second-tier cities have a sense of belonging. There is a huge billboard outside Yanjiao Community in Hebei Province: "How can I go to a good school without a hukou!" People who bought houses prayed that Yanjiao would be merged into Beijing, and they have a Beijing hukou since then. Everyone knows that the hukou in Beishangguang is expensive, so I set a city threshold for you-you say you belong to this big city, but you don't have a hukou in this city; You said you own a house in this city, but it's actually 20 kilometers away from the city center; You said that you have created the value of life in this city, but in fact, the deposit is not as good as that of civil servants in second-tier cities. Tighter first-tier cities can give you a sense of superiority, and looser second-tier cities can create your sense of belonging.