Everyone has to evaluate their own personal circumstances when deciding if / when to move. As a kid I remember my father once received a job offer in New York City with a significant pay raise. He did not accept the offer for several reasons but one of the major considerations was that cost of living was much higher in New York than in the Pacific Northwest at that time. My point being that cost of living is a legitimate concern when considering to relocate or not.
My personal strategy is that I am going to wait out the Seattle bubble (and there is a freaking bubble). Real estate prices will correct. My circumstances are probably a little different from most bubble watchers on this blog in that I am bit older and further along in my career (read - it's more difficult to change) and I have family here that need my personal assistance.
Also, I believe it unrealistic to expect real estate valuations to depreciate quickly. From what I have read, that just doesn't happen most times. Real estate in Japan has depreciated since the bust of their bubble in 1990, for about about 17 straight years. The good news is apparently there has been a "flattening out" in real estate values in Japan recently.
....Experts in the Japanese real estate market agree that the rapid rate of decline in land values is flattening out. Koji Takeda of Yamate Homes, a local real estate agent, tells us, "The price of real estate has dropped every year for 13 years due to the recession and delayed disposal of Non Performing Loans (NPLs) held by major banks. Now that land prices are at a 20-year low.....
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m ... _111506874
Remember, Japan is basically a group of islands with the total area of about the size of the state of California and is therefore especially vunerable to the "they aren't making any more land" perspective.
If Japan can have an extended period of real estate depreciation, someone please tell me how Seattle is different!