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M&A activity rises, fueled by foreign investors

A high salary goes only so far if the cost of living is even higher. If you want your dollar to go further, maybe it’s time to relocate…

Elizabeth A. Campbell was happy with the job offer from a top Houston law firm, but she wasn’t itching to leave the comfortable life she had built for herself and her two teenage boys in suburban New Jersey. Other than a detour to Michigan for law school, she was a lifelong Northeasterner.

Campbell drew up a table of the pluses and minuses of relocating. On the plus side: more affordable real estate, no state taxes, cheaper food and services, an international airport, and strong schools and sports programs. Only one minus: saying goodbye to friends and family.

It has been almost a year since Campbell joined Houston’s Andrews Kurth law firm as a partner and chief diversity officer, and the angst is long gone. She sold her 2,800-sq.-ft. house in Bordentown, N.J., for $350,000 and upgraded to a 4,200-sq.-ft. place on a golf course with five bedrooms and a game room six miles outside Houston. The price: less than $325,000.

Houston Is Rolling in Oil
“The bottom line was: ‘How come I didn’t live here already?’” Campbell said. “I came here because of a job. But it’s a wonderful city, and I can see myself retiring here.”

Only a few years ago, Houston was reeling. The implosion of Enron in 2001 had sandbagged the local economy, and the mood was grim. But that seems like a long time ago now. The explosion in energy costs has boosted the city’s oil- and natural gas-fed economy, which is home to ExxonMobil (XOM) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA), as well as Waste Management (WMI), KBR (KBR), and many more. Job seekers in all sorts of careers have started streaming into Houston, where the unemployment rate was 3.8% in April, the lowest level in eight years, and where the job growth rate was 2.8%.

Businessweek.com worked with Seattle’s Payscale.com to determine where the best and worst cities are for 20 common careers and found that—when it comes to earning a comfortable living—Houston it at or near the top for most jobs, from human resources manager to graphic designer. We adjusted the median compensation for jobs in each of the top 25 big-city metros for cost of living. Houston, Dallas, and Charlotte, N.C., rose to the top for many of the jobs because they’re affordable cities with competitive salaries. New York, San Francisco, Washington, Los Angeles, and Boston, which have some of the highest salaries, sank to the bottom because residents there pay through the nose for real estate, parking, groceries, and almost everything else.

Accepting a lower salary might make financial sense if you were willing to leave an expensive city such as Seattle and settle in, say, Oklahoma City. But it’s also important to know when a salary looks higher than it actually is.

When Is a Raise Not a Raise?
“What looks like a 20% raise might turn out to be a pay cut if you’re moving from a less expensive place like Pittsburgh to San Francisco,” said Al Lee, director of quantitative analysis at Payscale.com, which provides real-time salary information to individuals and employers.

For example, the median income for the executive director of a nonprofit in New York is $87,800, more money than you could expect in any other of the nation’s 25 largest cities. But on our list, New York is actually the worst place for the job because—adjusted for cost of living—the salary would be equivalent to just $41,400 in a city such as Detroit where lifestyle costs equal the national average.

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