Costs of Living
What is a dollar worth?
If you answered that it's worth a dollar, you must be living in Illinois. A research report by U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis found that the prices for a particular basket of goods and services—food, transportation, housing and education—are higher in some states than others. Illinois came in at almost exactly the average; a $100 bill will buy $100.70 worth of the items. People living in the District of Columbia, the nation's most expensive area, would have to pay, on average, $118.10 for the same basket of items.
The chart shows how costly these basic necessities are in each state. Hawaii, New York, New Jersey, California, Maryland, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Alaska are all expensive places to live, on average, while the dollar goes further in Mississippi (where you would pay just $86.70 for the BEA's package of goods and services), Arkansas, Alabama, South Dakota, Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio and Missouri.
Sources:
http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/regional/rpp/rpp_newsrelease.htm
http://taxfoundation.org/blog/real-value-100-each-state-2016
About the author
Athena K. Stone has been with Attentive Investment Managers, Inc. since 2003, is an Investment Advisor and the Chief Compliance Officer for the company. Mrs. Stone earned her Chartered Retirement Planning Counselor (CRPC) designation in 2010 from the College for Financial Planning. She received the designation of Accredited Investment Fiduciary (AIF) from Fi360 in 2011. She earned her Bachelor of Arts Degree in Organizational Leadership from Brandman University in 2012 and her Master of Science in Financial Planning and Designation of MPAS (Master Planner Advanced Studies) from the College for Financial Planning in 2018.
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