08 January 2018

STATE OF THE STATES 2018: DATA

STATE OF THE STATES 2018: DATA

From Site Selection magazine, January 2018

FROM SEA TO SHINING SEA

Our annual 50-state guide updates you on news from the past year, and what to watch for in the year ahead.

STATE OF THE STATES 2018: DATA
Welcome to State of the States 2018, an annual compendium of data that matter to global corporate location decision-makers looking for places to grow in the United States. In addition to containing updated legislative, demographic, economic and education data points, this edition includes the fourth annual installment of Rankings That Matter. This year this six-point scoreboard features a new component from the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation based on 25 indicators that measure the extent to which state economies are knowledge-based, globalized, entrepreneurial, IT-driven and innovation-oriented:
iconRank in the Tax Foundation’s 2018 State Business Tax Climate Index (Oct. 2017)
iconRank in 2016 Higher Education R&D Expenditure (Total in $000s in parentheses)
iconRank in total ACT National Career Readiness Certificates earned per capita among working-age adults, Dec. 2017 (total number in parentheses)
iconRank in 2017 State New Economy Index ranking (Information Technology & Innovation Foundation)
iconRank by Lowest Industrial Electric Power Cost (¢/kWh, EIA)
iconRank in Fiscal Condition Index (Mercatus Center at George Mason University, July 2017)
Mix and match these data points according to your own organization’s site selection priorities, and let the facts guide you toward the best location choice. 
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The State of the States report was compiled, edited and designed by Mark Arend, Adam Bruns, Gary Daughters, Karen Medernach, Daniel Boyer and Richard Nenoff.
Sources: Information in these pages comes from an array of sources that includes:
Standard & Poor’s (state credit ratings as of December 2017);
ESRI (2017 state populations, population growths, median household incomes, and median ages); National Science Foundation;
US Energy Information Administration;
US Bureau of Labor Statistics;
National Bureau of Economic Research;
US Census Bureau;
Conway Analytics’
Conway Projects Database;
State chambers of commerce, economic development agencies and business/industry associations;
press reports;
governors’ and corporate press rooms;
law firms; and legislative research services.

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