Wednesday, April 25, 2018

For Those Who Missed It: 11th Edition (2018), "Rich States, Poor States" -- April 25, 2018

Released last week. At the link, download the PDF at the upper left-hand corner.

Wow, New York, #50; California, #47. Never saw that coming. I thought California's budget crisis was over and was now one of the rich states. Any other surprises? Minnesota in the second column, #44 -- far below Alabama (#20); Mississippi (#24); Louisiana (#27); and Arkansas (#22) -- pretty much worse off than the old confederacy. What gives?


Of interest (state, economic performance rank [backward-looking]; economic outlook rank [forward-looking]):
  • California (crying): 20; 47
  • Connecticut (hmmm): 50; 40
  • Florida (has swallowed the red pill): 17; 6
  • Hawaii (oh, oh): 21; 45
  • Idaho (wow): 12; 2
  • Illinois (bad, and getting worse): 46; 48
  • Indiana (wow): 30; 3
  • Iowa (not looking good; despite all that wind energy): 18; 29
  • Massachusetts ("M" for mediocre): 15; 25
  • Michigan ("M" for aMazing): 47; 18
  • Minnesota ("M" for madness): 22; 44
  • Montana ("M" for misery): 9; 43
  • New Jersey: 49; 46
  • New York (one word: Bill, as in de Blasio): 19; 50
  • North Dakota: 3; 4
  • Oregon ("O" for oh-oh): 6; 41
  • South Carolina: 7; 33
  • Texas (never saw this coming): 1; 14
  • Washington (like Oregon): 2; 37

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