How much does North Dakota depend on federal money? Here's how the state compares to others
About a third of North Dakota's state budget relies on federal funding, according to a recent report from WalletHub.
To find out how big the difference in federal dependence is from state to state, WalletHub compared them using three different metrics: the return on taxes paid to the federal government, the share of federal jobs and federal funding as a share of state revenue.
The amount of federal funding in state budgets ranges between 18% and 50%, depending on the state, according to data from the National Association of State Budget Officers. In North Dakota, that figure was about 31%, or close to average.
Many states rely on the federal government to help pay for programs that serve millions of people, such as Medicaid, which serves more than 72 million people, or the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which serves nearly 43 million people.
The WalletHub report comes as President Donald Trump's administration has laid off more than 62,000 federal workers across 17 different agencies in less than two months, USA TODAY reported. Meanwhile, a budget resolution narrowly passed by the House calls for $2 trillion worth of federal spending cuts.
North Dakota ranked 25th.
Total score: 40.43
State residents' dependency rank: 3rd
State government's dependency rank: 50th
Alaska
Kentucky
West Virginia
Mississippi
South Carolina
New Jersey
California
Delaware
Massachusetts
Utah
South Dakota: 11th
Minnesota: 28th
Montana: 16th
This article originally appeared on Sioux Falls Argus Leader: North Dakota ranks 25th in states most dependent on federal money
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