2019’s States with the Best & Worst Taxpayer ROI

3:21 AM

Posted by: John S Kiernan

Tax Day can be a painful reminder of how much we have to invest in federal, state and local governments, though many of us are unaware of exactly what they give us in return. As a result, this creates a disconnect in the minds of taxpayers between the amount of money we should fork over every April and how much we deserve in return.

Perhaps that’s why, according to WalletHub’s Taxpayer Survey, 55% of U.S. adults feel they pay too much in taxes and why 90% don’t think that the government uses tax revenue wisely. We do know, however, that taxpayer return on investment, or ROI, varies based where one lives. Federal income-tax rates are uniform across the nation, yet some states receive far more federal funding than others. But federal taxes and support are only part of the story.

Different states have dramatically different tax burdens. This begs the question of whether people in high-tax states receive superior government services. Likewise, are low-tax states more efficient or do they receive low-quality services? In short, where do taxpayers get the most and least bang for their buck?

WalletHub aimed to answer that question by contrasting state and local tax collections with the quality of the services residents receive in each of the 50 states within five categories: Education, Health, Safety, Economy, and Infrastructure & Pollution. Our data set includes a total of 25 key metrics. Read on for our findings, methodology and commentary from a panel of experts.

  1. Main Findings
  2. Red States vs. Blue States
  3. Detailed Breakdown by State
  4. Ask the Experts: Taxes as an Investment
  5. Methodology

Main Findings

Embed on your website<iframe src="//d2e70e9yced57e.cloudfront.net/wallethub/embed/3283/taxpayerROI2.html" width="556" height="347" frameBorder="0" scrolling="no"></iframe> <div style="width:556px;font-size:12px;color:#888;">Source: <a href="https://ift.tt/2H21swV>  

Federal Taxes Paid vs. Spending Received by State

‘Taxpayer ROI’ Rank (1=Best)

State

‘Total Taxes Paid per Capita’ Rank*

‘Overall Government Services’ Rank

1 New Hampshire 3 2
2 Florida 2 31
3 South Dakota 10 14
4 Colorado 14 13
5 Virginia 17 9
6 Alaska 1 49
7 Missouri 5 35
8 Texas 6 36
9 Utah 21 10
10 Iowa 36 3
11 Nebraska 28 11
12 Georgia 11 39
13 South Carolina 4 42
14 Arizona 12 37
15 Wisconsin 35 6
16 Tennessee 8 41
17 Idaho 23 20
18 Oklahoma 13 40
19 Ohio 15 32
20 Indiana 25 22
21 Kansas 30 16
22 Montana 16 33
23 North Carolina 19 30
24 Alabama 9 47
25 Maine 32 18
26 Illinois 34 15
27 Rhode Island 33 19
28 Michigan 27 29
29 Pennsylvania 31 25
30 Oregon 26 34
31 Kentucky 22 38
32 Wyoming 39 17
33 Washington 37 24
34 Louisiana 7 50
35 New Jersey 41 12
36 Massachusetts 43 7
37 Minnesota 47 1
38 Mississippi 18 45
39 Connecticut 46 8
40 West Virginia 24 44
41 Maryland 40 27
42 Delaware 42 23
43 Nevada 29 43
44 New Mexico 20 48
45 Vermont 48 4
46 New York 44 21
47 North Dakota 50 5
48 California 45 28
49 Arkansas 38 46
50 Hawaii 49 26

*“Per Capita” includes the population aged 18 and older.  

 

Embed on your website<iframe src="//d2e70e9yced57e.cloudfront.net/wallethub/embed/3283/taxpayerROI1.html" width="700" height="450" frameBorder="0" scrolling="no"></iframe> <div style="width:700px;font-size:12px;color:#888;">Source: <a href="https://ift.tt/2H21swV>  

Red States vs. Blue States 2018-Taxpayer-ROI-Blue-vs-Red-Image

 

Detailed Breakdown by State

Overall Gov’t. Services Rank (1=Best)

State

Total Score

‘Education’ Rank

‘Health’ Rank

‘Safety’ Rank

‘Economy’ Rank

‘Infrastructure & Pollution’ Rank

1 Minnesota 79.04 5 1 8 2 4
2 New Hampshire 72.22 16 2 3 4 13
3 Iowa 71.88 3 4 13 7 20
4 Vermont 69.61 9 8 1 26 14
5 North Dakota 69.25 23 12 17 6 3
6 Wisconsin 68.99 1 18 11 10 35
7 Massachusetts 68.63 2 3 9 17 44
8 Connecticut 67.78 4 11 6 24 36
9 Virginia 67.67 6 24 7 9 32
10 Utah 66.11 18 14 15 1 31
11 Nebraska 64.74 29 13 19 5 7
12 New Jersey 64.62 8 23 5 12 49
13 Colorado 64.05 24 9 26 3 12
14 South Dakota 62.35 41 5 32 15 1
15 Illinois 62.21 10 17 22 22 30
16 Kansas 61.92 25 10 30 8 11
17 Wyoming 61.75 35 34 16 18 2
18 Maine 61.50 28 19 2 37 24
19 Rhode Island 61.08 22 7 4 45 38
20 Idaho 59.84 40 27 10 11 8
21 New York 59.79 13 21 12 40 39
22 Indiana 59.05 19 31 28 14 25
23 Delaware 58.60 7 44 40 23 6
24 Washington 58.26 15 16 29 20 45
25 Pennsylvania 56.91 21 20 14 31 43
26 Hawaii 56.33 38 6 21 34 26
27 Maryland 55.70 17 22 27 16 50
28 California 55.47 12 15 31 41 48
29 Michigan 55.43 32 28 23 21 37
30 North Carolina 54.81 11 47 33 36 18
31 Florida 54.57 14 37 37 38 27
32 Ohio 54.16 30 25 18 29 46
33 Montana 54.07 36 26 38 30 5
34 Oregon 52.26 44 30 25 43 9
35 Missouri 51.85 26 35 41 19 34
36 Texas 51.27 27 33 36 13 47
37 Arizona 50.74 34 32 42 35 21
38 Kentucky 50.48 37 36 20 42 40
39 Georgia 50.20 33 45 35 27 19
40 Oklahoma 49.39 20 41 39 25 42
41 Tennessee 45.94 39 42 44 28 15
42 South Carolina 45.10 31 43 48 39 22
43 Nevada 44.85 45 39 45 32 16
44 West Virginia 43.36 50 38 24 48 41
45 Mississippi 42.62 47 50 34 49 29
46 Arkansas 42.53 46 40 46 33 23
47 Alabama 42.49 43 48 43 44 28
48 New Mexico 40.79 48 29 49 50 10
49 Alaska 38.54 42 49 50 46 17
50 Louisiana 37.31 49 46 47 47 33

 

Ask the Experts: Turning Taxes Into an Investment

For more insight into how taxpayer funds are turned into government services as well as how taxpayers can measure the efficiency with which their money is used, we turned to a panel of economics and public-policy experts. You can check out their bios and responses to the following questions below.

  1. Do states with high tax burdens provide better government services?
  2. How can state and local governments use tax revenue more efficiently?
  3. How can average citizens assess the ROI of their local tax dollars?
  4. What's the most common way local governments waste taxpayer dollars?
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Methodology

In order to determine which states yield the best and worst return on investment (ROI) for taxpayers, WalletHub compared the quality of government services received by residents to the total state and local taxes they pay in each of the 50 states.

First, we analyzed each state across five key government-service categories: 1) Education, 2) Health, 3) Safety, 4) Economy and 5) Infrastructure & Pollution. The categories were further broken down into 25 relevant metrics, which are listed below with their corresponding weights. Each metric was graded on a 100-point scale, with a score of 100 representing the best quality of government service.

We then determined each state’s weighted average across all 25 metrics to calculate its “Overall Government Services Score.”

Finally, we constructed the Taxpayer ROI ranking by comparing each state’s “Overall Government Services Score” to its “Total Taxes Paid per Capita.” “Per Capita” includes the population aged 18 and older.

Education – Total Points: 20
  • Quality of Public University System: Double Weight (~7.27 Points)Note: Based on data from WalletHub’s College & University Rankings.
  • Quality of School System: Double Weight (~7.27 Points)Note: Based on data from WalletHub’s States with the Best & Worst School Systems ranking.
  • Public High-School Graduation Rate: Half Weight (~1.82 Points)
  • Projected Public High School Graduation Rate Increase Between 2016-2017 and 2031-2032: Half Weight (~1.82 Points)
  • Share of Idle Youth: Half Weight (~1.82 Points)Note: This metric refers to people ages 18-24 not attending school, not working, and with no degree beyond high school.
Health – Total Points: 20
  • Hospital Beds per 1,000 Residents: Full Weight (~2.50 Points)
  • Quality of Public Hospitals: Double Weight (~5.00 Points)Note: Based on data from Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
  • Average Life Expectancy at Birth (in years): Full Weight (~2.50 Points)
  • Infant-Mortality Rate per 1,000 Live Births: Full Weight (~2.50 Points)
  • Average Health-Insurance Premium: Full Weight (~2.50 Points)
  • Quality of Health Care: Double Weight (~5.00 Points)Note: Based on data from WalletHub’s States with the Best & Worst Health Care ranking
Safety – Total Points: 20
  • Violent-Crime Rate per Capita: Double Weight (~10.00 Points)
  • Property-Crime Rate per Capita: Full Weight (~5.00 Points)
  • Fatalities per 100 Million Vehicle Miles Traveled: Full Weight (~5.00 Points)
Economy – Total Points: 20
  • Median Annual Household Income: Double Weight (~5.00 Points)Note: Adjusted for cost of living
  • Annual Job-Growth Rate: Full Weight (~2.50 Points)Note: Adjusted for population growth
  • Share of Residents Living Below Poverty Line: Full Weight (~2.50 Points)
  • Economic Mobility: Full Weight (~2.50 Points)
  • Unemployment Rate: Double Weight (~5.00 Points)
  • Underemployment Rate: Full Weight (~2.50 Points)
Infrastructure & Pollution – Total Points: 20
  • Quality of Roads & Bridges: Double Weight (~6.66 Points)
  • Average Commute Time (in minutes): Full Weight (~3.33 Points)
  • Parks & Recreation Expenses per Capita: Full Weight (~3.33 Points)
  • Water Quality: Full Weight (~3.33 Points)
  • Air Pollution: Full Weight (~3.33 Points)

Videos for News Use:

 

Sources: Data used to create this ranking were collected from the U.S. Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Center for Education Statistics, Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Kaiser Family Foundation, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Natural Resources Defense Council, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, United Health Foundation, Council for Community and Economic Research, Road Information Program, The Equality of Opportunity Project, Federal Bureau of Investigation and WalletHub research.

Image: Oleksiy Mark / Shutterstock.com



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