Why Your State’s GDP Affects Your...

US States by GDP in 2023: Who’s Really Driving America’s Economy?

California’s economy is bigger than most countries. Texas could buy New Zealand twice over. New York? Forget Wall Street – their GDP is 90% eyeball rolls from subway delays.

I crunched the Bureau of Economic Analysis data. Here’s what matters.

The GDP Hierarchy: Top 8 States Explained

#1 California ($3.9T): Matches India’s entire economy. Runs on tech + agriculture + Hollywood ego.

#2 Texas ($2.6T): Oil money now competing with Silicon Valley transplants. Austin’s condo boom says it all.

#8 New Jersey ($806B): Pharma labs and NYC commuters. Still cheaper than Manhattan studios.

3 Reasons GDP Numbers Lie to You

  • Population skew: California has 39M people. Texas? 30M. Per capita? Texas wins.
  • Industry bubbles: Florida’s $1.6T? Tourism dies = economy tanks.
  • Debt ratios: Illinois’ $1.1T GDP but $130B pension debt? Net worth matters more.

“But How Does This Affect ME?” (Real Talk)

GDP growth = job openings. Example: Texas added 400K jobs in 2022. Ohio? 82K.

Your move if you’re a:

  • Job seeker: Target high-GDP states with labor shortages (see: Florida healthcare)
  • Business owner: Pennsylvania’s $974B economy = hungry mid-market customers
  • Investor: Commercial real estate in growing states (Georgia, Tennessee not listed but rising)

FAQs: State GDPs Demystified

Do these numbers include federal aid?

Nope. Pure private sector + state activity. COVID money isn’t baked in.

Why isn’t Alaska on the list?

Their GDP sits at $63B. Oil-dependent. One pipeline shutdown away from trouble.

Action Steps Based on 2023 Data

  1. Compare your state’s GDP growth to your industry’s trajectory
  2. If under 40? Prioritize high-GDP states for career moves
  3. Retiring? Low GDP states = cheaper living (Mississippi, West Virginia)

State economies comparison, GDP per capita, economic disparity, Bureau of Economic Analysis data, high-GDP states