Bankruptcies, business establishments, construction real estate, foreign trade, farms and agriculture, Gross Domestic and Gross State Product (GDP), prices (inflation)
Enrollment and student demographics, completion and dropout rates, educational attainment, expenditures and revenues, staff salaries, test scores and performance, private schools.
Expenditures, revenues by states and local government, including counties, cities, and special districts. Federal spending in states and local governments.
U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions From CO2 Down 14.4% Since 2003
07 January 2016
U.S. Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions from CO2 fell 14.4% between 2003 and 2013, reaching 17.3 metric tons per person. (A metric ton is 1,000 kg of CO2.) Emissions fell in 43 states and the District of Columbia, but rose in the remainder. The highest increase occurred in Nebraska, where CO2 emissions per capita rose from 24.8 to 28.6 tons. The sharpest drop was in Georgia, where GHG emissions per capita fell 64.8% to 13.7 tons. The lowest tons per capita are in the District of Columbia at 4.5.