As the United States nears its 250th anniversary, the nation faces a challenging question that transcends political divides: how is the country truly faring? A groundbreaking bipartisan report titled “State of the States,” released by the State of the Nation Project at Tulane University, offers a comprehensive long-term evaluation of progress and challenges across all 50 states and the District of Columbia. This analysis spans over three decades, leveraging more than 4,000 indicators across a sweeping set of 31 measures to capture economic, social, civic, and personal dimensions of well-being.
The “State of the States” report marks the first major attempt to evaluate not only economic conditions but also social and civic outcomes within the United States at the sub-national level. Utilizing large-scale data and advanced statistical methodologies, the research team meticulously aggregated data across domains such as life satisfaction, institutional trust, civil liberties, education, environmental quality, family health, economic performance, workforce dynamics, and mental health. By applying rigorous cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses, the project offers unprecedented insights into how states have evolved and diverged or converged over time.
A remarkable aspect of the report is its interdisciplinary and politically balanced collaboration. It includes experts from seven leading think tanks spanning the ideological spectrum, with contributors who have advised both Republican and Democratic administrations over recent decades. This approach ensured a shared fact-base intended to rise above partisan interpretations and create a platform for constructive dialogue. While the original “State of the Nation” report from 2025 compared the U.S. globally, this latest iteration focuses inward, revealing that the nation’s complexities resonate strongly at the state level as well.
Significantly, the analysis uncovers pronounced regional disparities. States clustered in the western Midwest and New England consistently exhibit the highest overall rankings across the included measures, signaling relative strengths in both economic and social indicators. Conversely, many Southern states tend to rank near the bottom of the spectrum, with Louisiana positioned as the lowest performer overall. These results highlight the entrenched socio-economic and institutional challenges facing some regions in contrast to others.
Trust, an essential component of societal cohesion, emerges as a critical variable with distinct regional patterns. Southern states, despite scoring moderately in personal well-being, demonstrate notably low levels of trust in institutions, particularly government entities at the state and local levels. Meanwhile, Mountain states exhibit the reverse trend, characterized by higher institutional trust but lower personal well-being scores, thus suggesting complex, location-specific dynamics in public sentiment and mental health.
One of the study’s sobering findings is the absence of positive movement on several key metrics across all states. No state shows improvement in measures such as life satisfaction, adult and youth depression rates, fatal drug overdoses, trust in the federal government, income inequality, long-term unemployment, or growth in hourly earnings. These stagnations point to systemic nationwide challenges that transcend local governance or policy variations.
Encouragingly, some progress has been made. All states have seen improvements in child mortality rates and total real state income, reflecting advancements in healthcare and economic productivity. Yet, the paradox remains that higher income levels per capita do not translate into better subjective well-being. This dichotomy underscores the complex interplay between economic wealth and quality of life, a phenomenon observed in previous research and reiterated here at the state scale with robust quantitative evidence.
Moreover, the convergence and divergence of state trajectories are nuanced. While many states face parallel downward trends in critical social indicators, economic disparities between states are widening, as reflected by increasing gaps in income and hourly wage growth. Simultaneously, social well-being disparities are growing, evidenced by rising differentials in trust in others and scientific institutions, as well as divergent trends in mental health outcomes such as depression, suicide, and overdose deaths.
Mental health emerges as a particularly acute concern, with the report documenting a general decline in national well-being and mental health. Despite universal challenges, some states are experiencing more pronounced declines, presenting opportunities for further investigation into localized risk factors and protective policies. Leading contributors to the report emphasize that understanding these discrepancies is vital for designing targeted interventions.
The report also documents a pervasive decline in social trust and connectedness. Across all states, surveys reveal increased feelings of isolation, disillusionment with institutions, and perceived declines in life satisfaction. Of the 225 instances where improvement could have been recorded on self-reported well-being metrics, only 12 showed positive trends—emphasizing the depth of national malaise related to social and psychological health.
Importantly, the report refrains from prescribing specific policy recommendations, focusing instead on establishing a widely accepted empirical foundation at a time when political and social polarization threatens common understanding. By creating a shared knowledge base, the report intends to empower policymakers, academics, and civic leaders at the state level to identify successes and failures and derive evidence-informed strategies.
The methodological rigor of the project is reflected in its comprehensive data processing and analytical techniques. It draws from multiple federal and state datasets, integrating demographic, economic, health, educational, and sociological statistics. The researchers employ advanced statistical modeling, including trend analyses, factor analysis, and composite index construction, to distill complex data streams into coherent, comparative metrics that can guide decision-making.
Ultimately, this ambitious endeavor highlights the paradoxes and nuances underlying the American experience as it stands on the crossroads of its future. It insists on the necessity of advancing beyond partisanship to grapple with tangible realities. This report provides not only a mirror reflecting contemporary challenges but also a roadmap for scientific inquiry and civic engagement aimed at improving the lives of all citizens through informed, data-driven action.
The full report and detailed state-by-state findings are publicly available at the State of the Nation Project website, inviting further exploration and community involvement in understanding and addressing the multidimensional challenges identified.
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Web References: https://stateofnation.org,
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Image Credits: Tulane University
Keywords: Political science, Public policy, Government, Democracy, Happiness, Economics, Mental health, Sociological data, Income inequality, Social welfare

