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North Dakota to Offer Early Retirement in Response to Low Oil Prices

North Dakota has announced that it will be offering some state employees early retirement incentives to help alleviate budget pressures. While the overall savings goal is unspecified as of yet, the reductions are intended to offset the drop in oil and gas tax revenues caused by the decline in oil prices, as well as the structural revenue losses resulting from the federal OBBB Act. The state has offered similar incentives in the past when oil prices have fallen.

15 State Treasurers Send Letter to Trump About Economic Impact of Immigration Actions

Fifteen state treasurers have sent a letter to President Trump expressing significant concern over the economic impacts of the administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement policies. They stress that these policies affect the willingness of people to go to work and travel freely within commercial districts and, as a result, are damaging economic activity in their states.The treasurers of Rhode Island, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Illinois, New Mexico, Colorado, Oregon, Maryland, Vermont, Washington, Connecticut, New York, California, Nevada, and Delaware are signatories to this letter.

Kentucky Distillers: Bourbon Contributes $10.6 billion to State Economy

In its biennial report , the Kentucky Distillers Association concludes that the bourbon industry contributes $10.6 billion to Kentucky’s economy and supports direct and indirect state employment of approximately 24,000. To put that into context, the state’s current dollar GDP was about $295 billion in 2024, according to the US BEA, and its total employment was approximately 2.05 million in December 2024 according to the US BLS. Despite citing generally upbeat statistics, the report does identify several headwinds for the industry from foreign demand and changing consumer tastes, and raises concerns over the distillery industry’s future employment and capital spending trends given these challenges.

Fraser Institute: New Hampshire Most "Economically Free” State

Food for thought from the Canada’s Fraser Institute. Its recently released report, Economic Freedom of North America , measures “the degree to which governments in North America permit their citizens to make their own economic choices”. The study uses data from 2023, incorporating government spending, tax, and labor market regulation statistics to formulate its rankings. It finds that the more “economically free” states enjoy higher incomes and faster population growth than their economically “less free” counterparts. The study gives New Hampshire the highest score of the 50 US states, and New Mexico the lowest.

Cape Cod Potato Chip Factory in Hyannis to Close

A minor state economic story, but still highly symbolic. The Campbell’s Company has announced that it will close the Cape Cod Potato Chip production facility in Hyannis, Massachusetts, bringing an end to its 40 year operating history. The company cites efficiency and supply chain optimization as reasons for the closure. Production will move to the company’s other facilities in  Beloit, Wisconsin, Charlotte, North Carolina, and Hanover, Pennsylvania.

Florida Council of 100 Launches Campaign to Promote Florida Gold Coast

The Florida Council of 100 is launching a new promotional campaign to attract business and investors to the West Palm Beach-Miami Florida Gold Coast region. The campaign, called “Ambition Accelerated”, is funded with $10 million in seed money from Steven Ross and Ken Griffin, and is scheduled to be unveiled tonight at the Wall Street Journal Invest Live conference being held in West Palm Beach.

Univ Hawaii Report Highlights Structural Weaknesses in State’s Economy

A new report from the University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization (UHERO) takes a very dim view of the state’s economic profile. The report targets the state’s high cost of living and below average economic growth as drivers of its high levels of outmigration. It notes that the state shouldn’t be compared to high growth, gentrifying regions with high housing costs that experience outmigration, but rather to “economically distressed or “left-behind” regions—marked by stagnant productivity and limited opportunity, though typically with much lower costs of living”. Finally, the report concludes that policy prescriptions shouldn’t only focus on affordability, but also on the underlying causes of the state’s economic stagnation.