United States Census of Governments explained

The Census of Governments is a census performed by the United States Census Bureau. It is mandated by .[1] The Census of Governments occurs twice-per-decade, in years ending with 2 and 7. The survey identifies the scope of American government at the federal, state, and municipal levels by measuring public finance, public employment, classifies municipal government structures and activities, and identifies municipal authorities and Special-purpose districts. The Census of Governments in its current form started in year 1957.

Revenue and expenditures reported for state & local governments in dollars and as a percent of gross domestic product for 2017 are as follows:[2]

US total (trillions of USD)percent of GDP
DescriptionState & localStateLocalState & localStateLocal
Revenue3.922.531.9420.1%13.0%10.0%
Expenditure3.662.321.9118.8%11.9%9.8%

By comparison US GDP in 2017 was $19.5 trillion.[3] Note that "State & local" is less than the sum of "State" and "Local" because of funds transfers.[4] Data for each state and District of Columbia are available from .

External links

Notes and References

  1. .
  2. Dollars for state and local come from . US GDP for 2017 is from . The percents were computed from these two sources.
  3. .
  4. These numbers are not 100 percent accurate due to reporting errors and errors introduced by extrapolating from the respondents to the whole. Fortunately, nonresponse was less than 10 percent per .