
Even Utah — mostly-self-sufficient — relies on federal funds
Utah is one of the least federally-reliant states in the nation — yet more than a quarter of its revenue comes from D.C., per a recent analysis.
Why it matters: The Trump administration and congressional Republicans are looking for ways to cut federal spending, and some states may be more vulnerable than others to major decreases.
By the numbers: As of 2022, federal funding accounted for more than 29% of Utah's revenue, according to a Pew Charitable Trusts analysis of the latest available census data.
Zoom out: Most states get an even bigger share of tax funding from federal sources.
It accounts for more than half of revenue in Louisiana and Alaska and nearly 50% in Arizona.
The intrigue: Utah is one of the few red states that isn't heavily reliant on federal funds.
Of the four states that get a smaller share of their revenue from D.C., only oil-rich North Dakota went for Trump in November.
Catch up quick: Utah, Wyoming and Nevada are the only three states that send more money to federal government coffers than they receive and also supported Trump.
13 states total give more to the feds than they get.
Context: The federal share of a state's overall revenue can fluctuate from year-to-year depending on overall federal spending levels, state tax collections and more.
States have been getting more federal funding than usual in the past few years due to COVID-19 and infrastructure spending.
Stunning stat: Total federal grants exceeded $1 trillion in 2022 for the first time, per Pew.
The big picture: Big losses in federal dollars can leave states scrambling for alternate funding for federally-supported programs and projects, or can cause states to cancel them entirely.
Case in point: FEMA is cutting $325 million in grants largely meant for flood mitigation in New York.

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