Comparing California to other states has become a common exercise among politicians, academicians and in the media. So how does California really shape up?
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This week, Next 10, a San-Francisco based non-profit, launched a website called Compare50.org for researching economic data on California and other states.
The gap in income between rich and poor people and blacks and whites has grown in California over the last 20 years, according to a report from nonprofit Next 10 in San Francisco.
California found to be an innovation leader, Texas an export leader, Mississippi tracks highest declines in poverty, North Dakota a GSP leader
In considering how state policy might improve California’s economic performance—especially when comparing California policies to those in other states—it is essential to put California’s economic performance into the proper context and perspective
We've heard all about the benefits of big data and the promise of being able to pull together data from disparate, far-flung sources into a single interface from which users can quickly and easily slice, dice, and combine any which way to yield us
Curious about job growth in your state? GSP? How incomes in your state compare to those in other states? A new first of its kind website tracks each of these key economic indicators, and more, allowing users to track and compare dozens of economic trends over time in all 50 states.
A new first of its kind website tracks can immediately compare key economic indicators for every state and let users track and compare dozens of economic trends over time.
Next 10 hired a team of illustrators, animators and writers to produce this fun short cartoon that gives viewers nonpartisan background information on California's cap-and-tr