And other areas lag behind cuz that's just their fate and nuttin they can do about it.
Nah... Just the other areas weren't blessed that the early America didn't choose them to establish financial and tech dominance.
It takes a lot of time to.undo the dominance of California and new York that republicans built. But rest assured, its happening. Let's ask our robot friend to compare the change since 1960s
To rank the changes in GDP rankings for California, New York, Texas, and Florida from 1963 to 2024 relative to each other, we can evaluate their progress based on the shift in their state GDP rankings and the growth in their economic output. The key metrics are:
1. **Change in Rank**: How many positions each state gained or lost in the U.S. state GDP rankings.
2. **GDP Growth Magnitude**: The relative increase in GDP (adjusted for inflation or nominal terms) to contextualize economic expansion.
3. **Contextual Factors**: Population growth, sectoral shifts, and economic drivers to explain the changes.
### Step 1: Change in GDP Rankings (1963 to 2024)
| State | 1963 Rank | 2024 Rank | Change in Rank (Positions) |
|-------------|-----------|-----------|----------------------------|
| Florida | 14th | 4th | +10 |
| Texas | 7th | 2nd | +5 |
| California | 2nd | 1st | +1 |
| New York | 1st | 3rd | -2 |
- **Florida**: Jumped 10 spots, the largest gain, from 14th to 4th.
- **Texas**: Gained 5 spots, moving from 7th to 2nd.
- **California**: Gained 1 spot, from 2nd to 1st, taking the top position.
- **New York**: Lost 2 spots, dropping from 1st to 3rd.
### Step 2: GDP Growth Magnitude
To compare economic growth, we can estimate the proportional increase in GDP from 1963 to 2024. Using 1963 GDP in chained 2017 dollars and 2024 nominal GDP (converted to approximate real terms for consistency), we calculate growth factors. Since direct conversion requires deflators, we’ll use nominal 2024 figures and approximate real growth trends based on available data.
| State | 1963 GDP (chained 2017 $B) | 2024 GDP (nominal $T) | Approx. Real Growth Factor* |
|-------------|----------------------------|-----------------------|-----------------------------|
| California | $57.2 | $4.1 | ~30–35x |
| Texas | $32.3 | $2.7 | ~40–45x |
| Florida | $23.4 | $1.65 | ~45–50x |
| New York | $64.7 | $2.3 | ~20–25x |
*Note: Growth factors are approximate, as 2024 nominal GDP isn’t directly comparable to 1963 chained 2017 dollars without precise deflators. Estimates use historical GDP deflators (~6x from 1963 to 2024) to ballpark real growth.
- **Florida**: GDP grew ~45–50x, driven by population growth (4.95M to 22M, ~4.4x) and tourism/real estate booms.
- **Texas**: GDP grew ~40–45x, fueled by population growth (9.6M to 31M, ~3.2x), energy, and tech diversification.
- **California**: GDP grew ~30–35x, with population growth (15.7M to 39M, ~2.5x) and tech/entertainment dominance.
- **New York**: GDP grew ~20–25x, slowest due to modest population growth (16.8M to 19.8M, ~1.2x) and outmigration.
### Step 3: Ranking the Changes Relative to Each Other
To rank the states’ changes, we weigh **rank improvement** (primary metric, as it directly reflects relative position shifts) and **GDP growth** (secondary, to capture economic scale). Contextual factors like population and sectoral shifts provide nuance.
1. **Florida (1st)**:
- **Rank Change**: +10 (14th to 4th), the largest climb.
- **GDP Growth**: ~45–50x, highest among the four, reflecting massive economic expansion.
- **Context**: Florida’s leap was driven by population surges (retirees, migrants), tourism (Disney World opened 1971), and real estate. Starting from a lower base (14th), its relative ascent is remarkable, overtaking industrial states like Illinois and Pennsylvania.
- **Why #1?**: Largest rank gain and highest proportional GDP growth.
2. **Texas (2nd)**:
- **Rank Change**: +5 (7th to 2nd), significant but less than Florida’s.
- **GDP Growth**: ~40–45x, slightly below Florida but still massive.
- **Context**: Texas capitalized on oil booms, tech growth (Austin), and population growth. Its higher starting rank (7th) meant less room to climb but a bigger absolute GDP today ($2.7T vs. Florida’s $1.65T).
- **Why #2?**: Strong rank gain and GDP growth, but Florida’s lower starting point and larger rank jump edge it out.
3. **California (3rd)**:
- **Rank Change**: +1 (2nd to 1st), modest but significant as it claimed the top spot.
- **GDP Growth**: ~30–35x, robust but lower than Florida/Texas due to a higher 1963 base.
- **Context**: California’s tech revolution (Silicon Valley), entertainment, and trade made it a global leader. Its smaller rank gain reflects its already high position in 1963.
- **Why #3?**: Smallest rank gain, though its absolute GDP ($4.1T) dwarfs others.
4. **New York (4th)**:
- **Rank Change**: -2 (1st to 3rd), the only decline.
- **GDP Growth**: ~20–25x, lowest due to slower population growth and economic shifts to Sun Belt states.
- **Context**: New York remained a financial powerhouse but faced outmigration and high costs, losing ground to California and Texas.
- **Why #4?**: Only state to lose rank, with the slowest GDP growth.
### Final Ranking of Changes (1963–2024)
1. **Florida**: Largest rank gain (+10), highest proportional GDP growth (~45–50x).
2. **Texas**: Strong rank gain (+5), near-top GDP growth (~40–45x).
3. **California**: Modest rank gain (+1), high but not top-tier GDP growth (~30–35x).
4. **New York**: Rank decline (-2), lowest GDP growth (~20–25x).
### Notes
- **Sun Belt Surge**: Florida and Texas exemplify the Sun Belt’s rise, outpacing California and New York in rank improvement and relative GDP growth due to migration and diversification.
- **Starting Points Matter**: Florida’s lower 1963 rank gave it more room to climb than Texas or California. New York’s fall reflects its peak position in 1963.
- **Absolute vs. Relative**: California’s absolute GDP ($4.1T) is unmatched, but relative change favors Florida and Texas.
Data: BEA for 1963 (chained 2017 dollars) and 2024 nominal GDP. Population from Census Bureau. Growth factors are estimates due to deflator complexities.
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What will it look like in 50 years? I have a hunch