By state/district, counting DC, which is guess what- BLUE :
9 of the top 10/11 are 'blue', 2 are 'red'.
9 of the bottom 10 are 'red', only one 'blue'.
State or Territory
|
GDP per capita [1][3] |
2020 |
2019 |
|
|
|
District of Columbia |
$201,360 |
$202,455 |
New York |
$87,866 |
$91,057 |
Massachusetts |
$84,722 |
$86,527 |
Washington |
$80,418 |
$80,509 |
Connecticut |
$78,971 |
$80,712 |
California |
$78,538 |
$79,437 |
Delaware |
$76,522 |
$78,924 |
North Dakota |
$70,603 |
$74,871 |
Maryland |
$69,805 |
$70,479 |
New Jersey |
$69,695 |
$71,394 |
Alaska |
$68,722 |
$74,135 |
Illinois |
$68,601 |
$69,913 |
Colorado |
$67,169 |
$68,245 |
Nebraska |
$66,480 |
$67,274 |
Minnesota |
$66,171 |
$68,045 |
Virginia |
$64,229 |
$65,085 |
Hawaii |
$63,863 |
$67,634 |
New Hampshire |
$62,293 |
$64,400 |
Wyoming |
$62,236 |
$69,676 |
South Dakota |
$61,444 |
$61,931 |
Pennsylvania |
$61,031 |
$63,188 |
Iowa |
$60,916 |
$61,609 |
Utah |
$59,998 |
$60,099 |
Texas |
$59,935 |
$63,608 |
Kansas |
$59,475 |
$60,596 |
Oregon |
$59,049 |
$60,156 |
Wisconsin |
$58,066 |
$59,990 |
Georgia |
$57,819 |
$58,874 |
Ohio |
$57,729 |
$59,450 |
Rhode Island |
$56,970 |
$58,483 |
North Carolina |
$55,292 |
$56,336 |
Indiana |
$55,165 |
$56,408 |
Nevada |
$54,998 |
$57,655 |
Tennessee |
$52,925 |
$55,134 |
Vermont |
$52,614 |
$54,505 |
Missouri |
$52,297 |
$53,481 |
Louisiana |
$52,093 |
$55,153 |
Michigan |
$51,766 |
$53,771 |
Florida |
$50,424 |
$51,484 |
Arizona |
$50,187 |
$50,758 |
Maine |
$49,029 |
$50,318 |
Montana |
$47,649 |
$49,466 |
New Mexico |
$47,623 |
$50,077 |
Kentucky |
$46,909 |
$48,162 |
Oklahoma |
$46,871 |
$51,011 |
South Carolina |
$46,318 |
$47,995 |
Idaho |
$45,997 |
$46,765 |
Alabama |
$45,691 |
$46,484 |
Arkansas |
$42,591 |
$43,348 |
West Virginia |
$41,299 |
$43,929 |
Mississippi |
$38,493 |
$38,940 |
Overall, cities, even in 'red' states tend to be 'blue'.
There may well be higher unemployment in the more prosperous 'blue' states as your link alleges. That's a complex issue that relates to the productivity in general, people tend to move to jobs and more prosperous areas and when the economy declines, as it did in 2020, those areas have increased unemployment. People emmigrate from those regions, as California's unprecedented population decline in Trump's covid 19 recession. |