W Post
   
_GovBeat_ (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/govbeat) 
The nine states (and one District) that won 2013
 
 
    *   By Reid Wilson  
    *    (mailto:[email protected]?subject=Reader feedback for 'The 
nine states (and one District) that won 2013')   *   December 27,  2013


 


 
 
Crime, housing starts, job growth and rainy-day funds:  How did your state 
do on key indicators?
Governors, economic development offices and tourism agencies will seize on  
anything — any statistic — to set them apart from their competitors. And 
every  time the government publishes statistics, someone has to be first. So 
let’s hand  out some bragging rights. 
An important caveat: Of the hundreds of statistics out there, we chose 
eight  that paint a good picture of various aspects of life. This list isn’t 
meant to  be comprehensive, and it’s not meant to be a statement on policy. But 
it gives a  good glance at which states are on winning streaks. 
Based on statistics published by various government agencies and compiled 
by  several outside groups, these nine states, and one District, take the 
prize for  the best states of 2013: 
Fastest job  growth: 
If any state thrived during the great recession, North Dakota was it. The  
continued development in the western third of the state, fueled by growth in 
the  Bakken oil field, meant North Dakota’s unemployment rate was sinking 
even as the  rest of the country’s was growing. 
That growth continued this year. As of November 2012, there were 437,000 
jobs  in North Dakota. As of November 2013, the Bureau of Labor Statistics 
reported  the state had 455,000 jobs — a 4 percent increase over the last year. 
Seven other states — Texas, Florida, Idaho, Georgia, Oregon, Utah and 
Indiana  — saw the number of jobs in their states increase by more than 2 
percentage  points over the last year. Texas and California both added more 
than 
200,000  jobs during the year. 
Job growth, Nov. 2012 to Nov. 2013 
(Source: _Bureau of  Labor Statistics_ 
(http://www.bls.gov/news.release/laus.t05.htm) ) 
Alaska was the only state that lost jobs this year, about 4,000. Puerto 
Rico  had it roughest: the number of jobs available there tanked by more than 4 
 percentage points. 
Fastest-sinking unemployment  rate: 
In November 2012, North Carolina’s unemployment rate stood at 9.4 percent.  
Now, the Bureau of Labor Statistics says the Tarheel State’s unemployment 
rate  is at 7.4 percent. That two-point drop was the steepest decline of any 
state  year over year. 
New Jersey, Florida and South Carolina all saw their unemployment rates 
drop  by more than 1.5 percentage points. California, West Virginia, Colorado,  
Indiana, Oregon, Georgia, Nevada, Rhode Island and Utah’s unemployment 
rates all  fell by more than a point. 
Unemployment rate change, Nov. 2012 to Nov. 2013 
(Source: _BLS_ (http://www.bls.gov/news.release/laus.t05.htm) ) 
Bad news for Arkansas, Louisiana and the District of Columbia: The  
unemployment rate in November 2013 was actually higher — though only slightly — 
 
than it was in November 2012. 
Fastest-growing  wages: 
Workers in Washington, D.C., saw their hourly wages rise faster than any of 
 the 50 states over the last year. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported 
 average hourly earnings jumped by 5.53 percent between the third quarter 
of 2012  and the third quarter of 2013. Colorado workers did best among the 
states,  notching a 5.25 percent increase in hourly wages. 
Average hourly earnings, Q3 2012 to Q3 2013 
(Source: _Bureau of  Economic Analysis_ 
(http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/regional/spi/2013/spi1213.htm) ) 
North Dakota workers saw their average weekly paychecks rise the most 
(Again,  credit goes to the oil and gas industry). Average weekly earnings in 
North  Dakota grew by 7.03 percent last year, edging weekly wages in the 
District of  Columbia, which rose by 6.12 percent. 
Weekly wages grew by more than 5 percentage points in West Virginia,  
Pennsylvania and Massachusetts. 
Average weekly earnings, Q3 2012 to Q3 2013 
(Source: _Bureau of  Economic Analysis_ 
(http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/regional/spi/2013/spi1213.htm) ) 
Hourly wages fell in North Carolina, Alabama, Maine, Delaware and  
Connecticut. Weekly wages stayed even in Hawaii, and fell in Tennessee, 
Alabama,  
Oklahoma, Wyoming, Nevada, Maine, Delaware and Connecticut. 
Fastest-rebounding tax  collections: 
State income, sales and corporate tax revenues can indicate a rebounding  
economy — the more money coming in, the higher the tax collections. New 
Mexico  economists project a 6.86 percent increase in tax revenue collections 
between  Fiscal Years 2013 and 2014, the highest in the nation. 
New Jersey and Alaska also expect revenue growth of more than 6 percent  
(Alaska changed its oil extraction tax structure this year, meaning the state  
will rely more on corporate taxes than it has in previous years). 
State tax collections, FY 2013 to FY 2014 
(Source: _National  Association of State Budget Officials_ 
(http://www.nasbo.org/sites/default/files/NASBO%20Fall%202013%20Fiscal%20Survey%20of%20States
_0.pdf) ) 
Fourteen states expect their personal income, sales and corporate tax  
revenues to fall over the next fiscal year, in some cases because of tax cuts  
passed by legislatures earlier this year. North Dakota, which is transferring 
 its tax burden to oil and gas industries (Sensing a theme on North Dakota 
yet?),  expects its revenue from income, sales and corporate taxes to drop 
by nearly 11  percent next year; personal income tax revenue in North Dakota 
is expected to  drop by more than half, from $1.3 billion to $616 million, 
according to the  National Association of State Budget Officials. 
Most frugal  states: 
During the recession, most states had to rely on their rainy day funds to 
get  them through difficult times. Now, as tax revenue rebounds, states are  
rebuilding those savings — and in many cases building bigger cushions than 
they  had before. 
Texas was most aggressive in rebuilding its rainy day fund this year. The  
state set aside more than $3.4 billion between Fiscal Year 2012 and 2013.  
California, which spent most of the great recession slashing government 
services  to the core, set aside $2.4 billion for the next rainy day. And 
Florida 
and Ohio  saved almost $1 billion. 
State reserve fund growth, FY 2012 to FY 2013 
(Source: _Pew  Charitable Trusts_ 
(http://www.pewstates.org/research/data-visualizations/fiscal-50-state-trends-and-analysis-85899523649#ind5)
 ) 
Extraction taxes give resource-heavy states a little more breathing room.  
Alaska and North Dakota both saw their rainy day funds decline sharply, by 
$2  billion and $1.1 billion respectively. But they’re still in good shape: 
The Pew  Charitable Trust’s project on State Fiscal Health estimates Alaska’
s reserve  funds are sufficient to keep the state operating for 775 days, 
while the $524  million North Dakota still has on hand means the state could 
function for 89  days on its own. 
Fastest-rebounding housing  market: 
It’s good to be a homebuilder in New Jersey and West Virginia. The Census  
Bureau and the National Association of Homebuilders report both states have 
seen  a 42 percent jump in building permits for single-family dwellings 
between 2012  and 2013. 
Georgia, California and Florida, three states hit hard by the bursting  
housing bubble, will see big new housing booms; building permits in all three  
states have jumped by more than 35 percent. 
Year-to-date change in single family building permits issued, through  
October 2013 
(Sources: _National  Association of Home Builders via U.S. Census Bureau_ 
(http://www.nahb.org/reference_list.aspx?sectionID=132) ) 
Vermont and New Mexico are still seeing the number of single-family housing 
 permits decreasing year over year. But every other state is seeing renewed 
 growth in the market. 
States getting  safer: 
What if the crime-fighting main characters in “Hawaii 5-0″ went out of  
business? Hawaii’s crime rate has plunged by 25 percent since 2007, according 
to  FBI data compiled by the Pew Charitable Trusts. And Sin City is getting 
a lot  less sinful: Nevada’s crime rate is down by the same margin. 
Since 2007, the FBI reported crime rates declining by more than 20 
percentage  points in Florida, Maryland, Arizona and Wyoming. In fact, the 
crime 
rate has  dropped by more than 10 percentage points in 35 states. 
Change in crime rate, 2007-2012 
(Source: _Pew  Charitable Trusts via FBI_ 
(http://www.pewstates.org/research/data-visualizations/states-cut-both-crime-and-imprisonment-85899528171)
 ) 
The crime rate has increased in only five states since 2007, the FBI said.  
The situation is getting worse in New Hampshire, where the rate is up 17 
points  in the last five years, and South Dakota, where crime is up 20 points 
over the  same period. 
So, congratulations to top officials in Colorado, North Dakota, North  
Carolina, New Mexico, New Jersey, Texas, Hawaii, Nevada and the District of  
Columbia: You won 2013, in some form or  another.

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