Long-Term US GDP Growth Rate by State, Second Quarter 2020

Dec 17, 2020
Long-Term Gross Domestic Product Growth Rate in US States

The chart above shows the annualized nominal gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate in each US state over the past five years as of the second quarter of 2020 and the growth rate over the past ten years.  Nine states experienced negative growth in the past five years and three of those also experienced negative growth over the past ten years.

Findings

  • The difference between the state with the largest annualized five-year growth rate, Utah, and the state with the smallest, Wyoming, is 7.24 percentage points.
  • The difference between the state with the largest annualized ten-year growth rate, Washington, and the state with the smallest, Alaska, is 7.19 percentage points.
  • The median annualized five-year growth rate in the 50 US states is 0.64% and the mean 0.93%.
  • The median annualized ten-year growth rate in the 50 US states is 2.57% and the mean 2.57%.
  • Of the 50 states, zero grew faster over the past five years than they did over the past ten years, zero had the same annualized growth rate over both periods, and 50 grew slower over the past five years than they did over the past ten years.

Caveats

  • Data is from the second quarters of 2010, 2015, and 2020.
  • The data is seasonally adjusted in current dollars.
  • Growth rates may differ from those provided by the Bureau of Economic Analysis as the BEA's growth rates are based on chained dollars in conjunction with the chain index or the quality index for real GDP.
  • All figures are rounded to the nearest hundredth.

Details

Wyoming had the worst performance over the past five years with an annualized growth rate of -2.58%.  Washington had the best performance with an annualized gain of 4.66%.

Over the past ten years, Alaska had the worst performance with an annualized growth rate of -1.32% while Washington had the best performance with an annualized growth rate of 5.87%.

North Dakota had the worst change in its growth rate between its annualized ten-year growth and its annualized five-year growth slowing its rate by 6.21 percentage points.  Maine had the best change in its growth rate between its annualized ten-year growth and its annualized five-year growth slowing its rate by 0.45 percentage points.

Maine went from having the 37th largest annualized growth rate over the past ten years to the 17th largest annualized growth rate over the past five years.  Conversely, North Dakota went from having the 7th highest annualized growth rate over the past ten years to the 48th highest annualized growth rate over the past five years.  Three states had annualized growth rates in the top five both over the past ten years and over the past five years: Utah (2nd highest annualized growth over ten years, highest annualized growth over five years), Washington (highest annualized growth over ten years, 2nd highest annualized growth over five years), and Oregon (5th highest ten-year, 5th highest five-year).  Three states have ranked in the bottom five over both periods: West Virginia (47th ten-year, 46th five-year), Alaska (50th ten-year, 49th five-year), and Wyoming (49th ten-year, 50th five-year).

Sources

US Bureau of Economic Analysis.  2020.  "GDP by State."  Accessed November 19, 2020.  https://www.bea.gov/data/gdp/gdp-state.

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