Am niedrigsten ist Costilla County, CO mit 41,5 % des mittleren HHI von Colorado und am höchsten ist Los Alamos County, NM mit 232,6 % des mittleren HHI von New Mexico
Would be interesting to see this overlapped with voting data
Basic-Pressure-1367 on
This really feels like something that needs to adjust for cost of living.
lotusbloom74 on
Makes sense for Los Alamos County but it’s pretty tiny, you can barely identify it on the map of New Mexico. Its high income is associated with very high education levels of its residents as most people there are employed by the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
dollars and not PPP – as in 300k in Little Rock probbaly buys a more comfortable life than $400k in Silicon Valley on an after tax basis
PhummyLW on
We’ve gotta stop using red and blue for things that are positive and negative. Use green instead of blue
Mr_1990s on
This is a relative of r/PeopleLiveInCities. It’s r/PeopleLiveInCitiesAndVacation.
ramcoro on
Whats the most balanced state? At a glance it looks like Iowa.
[deleted] on
[deleted]
pzschrek1 on
Here in Iowa the joke goes “we should give the bottom row of counties to Missouri, it’d raise the average in both states”
Shit, maybe it’s actually true
ExistentialTabarnak on
This checks out for Massachusetts. While Massachusetts statistically does rank very high in income and education and quality of life, what people don’t always realize is that the majority of that is heavily concentrated in Boston and its suburbs. Central and Western MA, and even parts of Eastern MA like the South Coast, are much more blue-collar and less well-off. It’s the part of Massachusetts that always gets ignored. To many people from outside New England, Boston and Massachusetts are essentially interchangeable.
Boringdude1 on
The most populous, ubran counties are generally the higher income counties. Rural counties are often poor.
crt983 on
Oh, you found a map that shows you cities.
michaelbosh on
the connecticut counties are incorrectly displayed
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HHI?
Would be interesting to see this overlapped with voting data
This really feels like something that needs to adjust for cost of living.
Makes sense for Los Alamos County but it’s pretty tiny, you can barely identify it on the map of New Mexico. Its high income is associated with very high education levels of its residents as most people there are employed by the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
interactive version: [https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/Oryi5/5/](https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/Oryi5/5/)
The problem with these maps is they are in
dollars and not PPP – as in 300k in Little Rock probbaly buys a more comfortable life than $400k in Silicon Valley on an after tax basis
We’ve gotta stop using red and blue for things that are positive and negative. Use green instead of blue
This is a relative of r/PeopleLiveInCities. It’s r/PeopleLiveInCitiesAndVacation.
Whats the most balanced state? At a glance it looks like Iowa.
[deleted]
Here in Iowa the joke goes “we should give the bottom row of counties to Missouri, it’d raise the average in both states”
Shit, maybe it’s actually true
This checks out for Massachusetts. While Massachusetts statistically does rank very high in income and education and quality of life, what people don’t always realize is that the majority of that is heavily concentrated in Boston and its suburbs. Central and Western MA, and even parts of Eastern MA like the South Coast, are much more blue-collar and less well-off. It’s the part of Massachusetts that always gets ignored. To many people from outside New England, Boston and Massachusetts are essentially interchangeable.
The most populous, ubran counties are generally the higher income counties. Rural counties are often poor.
Oh, you found a map that shows you cities.
the connecticut counties are incorrectly displayed