U.S. States’ GDP Compared to Countries

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In this article, we will be taking a look at the 50 U.S. States' GDP compared to countries. To skip our detailed analysis, you can go directly to see the top 10 U.S. States' GDP compared to other countries.

There are a lot of tiny countries that show up in lists of richest countries by GDP per capita. According to Worldbank, Lichtenstein has the highest GDP per capita in the world with an estimated average income of $158,000 per person. This is a very misleading statistic though. Lichtenstein's population is only 38,000. This isn't a country; it is a town. If we use the same approach, then Atherton, a small town in California, would be among "richest countries in the world" with an average income of $171,000 per person. We can get even more ridiculous and pretend that Medina, a small city in Washington that's home to billionaires Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates, is a country with its population of 2900.

Four years ago, Texas Governor Greg Abbott said "the Texas economy is even larger than the economy of Russia". He is right. If we treat U.S. states as countries, several of them will be among the richest countries in the world. That's what we did in this article. Investors might be better off by investing in individual states' companies instead of the broader S&P 500 Index that invests in the biggest companies in the entire market. Let's first take a look at the bigger picture and then we will talk about the economically biggest states in the United States.

Comparing the GDPs of the biggest countries in the world isn't really very interesting. Everyone knows that the top two economies in the world are China and the U.S., and the U.S. is first by a decent margin and has been top for around a century now. After all, the U.S. GDP in 2021 was $23 trillion while China was second at $17.7 trillion, a massive gap to the U.S.

Not only is the U.S. the biggest economy in the world, it is also the wealthiest country in the world even though these resources are extremely unevenly distributed. Having weathered some massive storms during the decades, be it the Great Depression in the 1930s, World War II in the 1940s, the Vietnam War from the 1950s to the early 1970s, the 2008 Great Recession and recently the Covid-19 pandemic, the U.S. economy has always come back strong, headed by its biggest industries which include professional, scientific and technical services, healthcare, finance, insurance and real estate, with the latter being the biggest industry in the country right now.

Having emerged from the worst pandemic in a century which seriously affected the country's economy, 2022 seemed to be earmarked as the year for recovery, but rising inflation rates and subsequently rising interest rates to combat inflation, resulted in a 2022 where the economy actually receded by 0.6% in Q2 2022 as the manufacturing sector slowed down. In June 2022, the inflation rate was recorded at 9.1% which was the largest such increase in 40 years, though it has steadily dropped in every month since, which has also allowed the U.S. to post GDP growth of 3.2% in Q3 2022, reflecting an increase in both exports and consumer spending as inflation's impact on disposable income decreased slightly.