Updated: 2022’s Most & Least Federally Dependent States – WalletHub Study

With states having received hundreds of billions of dollars in federal aid during the COVID-19 pandemic, the personal-finance website WalletHub today released updated rankings for 2022’s Most & Least Federally Dependent States, as well as accompanying videos and expert commentary.

This report illustrates the extent to which states are independent economically. However, the oxymoron in this situation is that states with a higher level of federal dependence are likely better positioned to handle the coronavirus pandemic, given that a lot of relief has come from the federal government. In order to identify which states most and least depend on federal support, WalletHub compared the 50 states across three key metrics: return on taxes paid to the federal government; federal funding as a share of state revenue; and share of federal jobs.

Most Federally Dependent Least Federally Dependent
1. Alaska 41. California
2. Mississippi 42. Colorado
3. Kentucky 43. Massachusetts
4. West Virginia 44. Iowa
5. Montana 45. Illinois
6. New Mexico 46. Washington
7. Arizona 47. Utah
8. Louisiana 48. Kansas
9. Indiana 49. New Jersey
10. Alabama 50. Delaware

Key Stats

  • With an average dependency rank of 20.44, Red States are altogether more reliant on federal funding than Blue States, which rank 30.56 on average. (The lower the rank, the more dependent the state is.)
  • There is a 61.7 percent correlation between a state’s federal dependency and its per-capita GDP. That means the least wealthy states tend to receive the most federal support.
  • Illinois is the sixth least federally dependent state, which helps explain the fact that it has the highest tax rates in the nation. On the flip side, Alaska is the most federally dependent state and has the lowest tax rates.

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