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The BEA regional economic accounts provide a wealth of statistics that detail the geographic distribution of U.S. economic activity and growth and provide a consistent framework for analyzing and comparing individual state and local area economies. Employment, compensation, wages and salaries, personal current transfer receipts, personal current taxes, and per capita personal income statistics are also available.
BEA's industry accounts are used extensively by policymakers and businesses to understand industry interactions, productivity trends, and the changing structure of the U.S. economy.
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What is Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by County? GDP is a comprehensive measure of the economies of counties. Gross domestic product estimates the value of the goods and services produced in an area. It can be used to compare the size and growth of county economies across the state.
This dataset is not not adjusted for inflation and represents the value of the goods and services in dollars at the time of the estimate. If you are looking to evaluate the growth of county economies over time, use of the Real GDP which is adjusted for inflation would eliminate changes in GDP caused by increases or decreases in the value of the US dollar. More information about the BEA's GDP by County is available here: GDP by County, Metro and Other Areas.
This product uses the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) Data API but is not endorsed or certified by BEA.
2018 to present (approximate 1 quarter lag) Virginia Gross Domestic Product (GDP) quarterly estimate (in millions) with industry detail.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis; Regional Economic Accounts, SQGDP table: Quarterly GDP by State SQGDP2 Data accessed from the Bureau of Economic Analysis website (https://apps.bea.gov/API/signup/)
Additional information on GDP and this data is available on the Bureau of Economic Analysis website (https://www.bea.gov/resources/learning-center/what-to-know-gdp)
SQGDP2 table Footnotes 1/ For levels: millions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates; for annualized percent change and compound growth rate: seasonally adjusted at annual rates. Industry detail is based on the 2012 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Calculations are performed on unrounded data. * For the All industry total and Government and government enterprises, the difference between the United States and sum-of-states reflects overseas activity, economic activity taking place outside the borders of the United States by the military and associated federal civilian support staff. (D) Not shown to avoid disclosure of confidential information; estimates are included in higher-level totals.
The "Regional Economic Information System" from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) contains information for all counties, States, metropolitan statistical areas, and BEA Economic Areas, 1969-99, for personal income by major source, per capita personal income, population, earnings by 2-digit Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) industry, full-time and part-time employment by 1-digit SIC industry, regional economic profiles, transfer payments by major program, farm income and expenses, and the BEA Regional Fact Sheet (BEARFACTS). It also includes State quarterly personal income estimates; county-level gross commuting flows for 1981-99; Census Bureau estimates on intercounty commuting flows for 1960, 1970, 1980, and 1990; and Census Bureau county-level commuting flows and average wage estimates at the 1-digit SIC level for 1980 and 1990.
Regional income from REIS is available online from:
"http://www.bea.gov/bea/regional/reis/"
Note: Some BEA information may be available through STAT-USA:
"http://www.stat-usa.gov/"
This public dataset was created by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). It provides a county level view of income, wages, proprietors' income, dividends, interest, rents, and government benefits, including a number of federal and state-level subsidies. Per capita income can be used to gauge the average financial health and associated social needs of an area. Analysis across regions offers a way to assess relative standard of living and quality of life of the population. Trends analysis of these data over time can also uncover specific regions of economic growth or decline across a variety of indicators. These personal income data represent an important lens into the financial security and socioeconomic determinants of health at the community level. They are used by the federal government to allocate hundreds of billions of dollars into state and local programs, to project budgets and trust fund balances, and to develop a more complete picture of labor costs. Personal income statistics can also help illustrate the dynamics between Americans' incomes, spending, and savings. The data summarize per capita income at the county level, including personal income, net earnings, transfer receipts, benefits programs, unemployment insurance, subsidy programs, retirement, dividends, insurance compensation, and several other economic indicators measured by the Department of Commerce or reported to other public agencies. For more information, please refer to the BEA’s Regional Economic Accounts Definitions .
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Graph and download economic data for Government current expenditures (W022RC1A027NBEA) from 1929 to 2024 about expenditures, government, GDP, and USA.
This dataset provides quarterly personal income estimates for State of Iowa produced by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis . Data includes the following estimates: personal income, per capita personal income, proprietors' income, farm proprietors' income, compensation of employees and private nonfarm earnings, compensation, and wages and salaries for wholesale trade. Personal income, proprietors' income, and farm proprietors' income available beginning 1997; per capita personal income available beginning 2010; and all other data beginning 1998. Personal income is defined as the sum of wages and salaries, supplements to wages and salaries, proprietors’ income, dividends, interest, and rent, and personal current transfer receipts, less contributions for government social insurance. Personal income for Iowa is the income received by, or on behalf of all persons residing in Iowa, regardless of the duration of residence, except for foreign nationals employed by their home governments in Iowa. Per capita personal income is personal income divided by the Census Bureau’s midquarter population estimates. Proprietors' income is the current-production income (including income in kind) of sole proprietorships, partnerships, and tax-exempt cooperatives. Corporate directors' fees are included in proprietors' income. Proprietors' income includes the interest income received by financial partnerships and the net rental real estate income of those partnerships primarily engaged in the real estate business. Farm proprietors’ income as measured for personal income reflects returns from current production; it does not measure current cash flows. Sales out of inventories are included in current gross farm income, but they are excluded from net farm income because they represent income from a previous year’s production. Compensation to employees is the total remuneration, both monetary and in kind, payable by employers to employees in return for their work during the period. It consists of wages and salaries and of supplements to wages and salaries. Compensation is presented on an accrual basis - that is, it reflects compensation liabilities incurred by the employer in a given period regardless of when the compensation is actually received by the employee. Private nonfarm earnings is the sum of wages and salaries, supplements to wages and salaries, and nonfarm proprietors' income, excluding farm and government. Private nonfarm wages and salaries is wages and salaries excluding farm and government. Wages and salaries is the remuneration receivable by employees (including corporate officers) from employers for the provision of labor services. It includes commissions, tips, and bonuses; employee gains from exercising stock options; and pay-in-kind. Judicial fees paid to jurors and witnesses are classified as wages and salaries. Wages and salaries are measured before deductions, such as social security contributions, union dues, and voluntary employee contributions to defined contribution pension plans. More terms and definitions are available on https://apps.bea.gov/regional/definitions/.
BEA's Public Data Listing
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Graph and download economic data for Real Gross Domestic Product: Government and Government Enterprises (92) in the New England BEA Region (NENGGOVRQGSP) from Q1 2005 to Q1 2025 about New England BEA Region, GSP, government, real, industry, GDP, and USA.
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BEA must continually update its economic accounts to keep pace with the ever-changing U.S. and global economies. The BEA Strategic Plan tracks BEA’s progress toward achieving the milestones related to improvements to BEA's accounts. This indicator tracks the bureau's progress toward achieving milestones of data and methodological improvements.
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The importance of data as an ingredient for sound economic decision-making requires BEA to deliver data to decision-makers and other data users not only quickly but also reliably—that is, on schedule. Each fall, BEA publishes a schedule for the release of its economic data the following year; this measure is evaluated as the number of scheduled releases issued on time. BEA has an outstanding record of releasing its economic data on schedule.
This map shows each county's contribution to its state's gross domestic product (GDP) in the United States. Darker purple indicates counties which are contributing far more than the "average" county contributes to its home state in the U.S. in 2019. Lighter purple indicates counties contributing at a lower level than other counties in the same state in 2019. All are important contributions.GDP is the value of goods and services produced within a county. This map uses layers containing 2019 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) estimates from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) for the nation, regions, states, and counties. Breakdowns by industry available, using North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) groups. Table CAGDP2, downloaded February 2, 2021.https://www.bea.gov/data/gdp/gdp-county-metro-and-other-areas Null values are either due to the data being unavailable, or not shown to avoid disclosure of confidential information (in these cases, estimates are included in higher-level totals).The percentages of the next highest geography level's GDP are also available, i.e. regions have percentages for nation's GDP, states have percentages of their region's GDP, and counties have percentages of their state's GDP. If the GPD estimate is unavailable, so is the percentage. If a percentage of state is listed as 0.0 but there is a value for GDP, then this value is <0.1, which rounds to zero. Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding and null values.Combined Counties:Kalawao County, Hawaii is combined with Maui County. Separate estimates for the jurisdictions making up the combination areas are not available.Virginia combination areas consist of one or two independent cities with populations of less than 100,000, combined with an adjacent county. The county name appears first, followed by the city name(s). Separate estimates for the jurisdictions making up the combination areas are not available.Boundaries used to create regions and combination areas:Boundaries for this layer were created using the Merge and Dissolve geoprocessing tools in ArcGIS Pro using regional and county combination areas for Hawaii and Virginia as definitions from BEA.Starting boundaries came from the 2019 US Census TIGER geodatabases. These are Census boundaries with water and/or coastlines clipped for cartographic purposes. For state and county boundaries, the water and coastlines are derived from the coastlines of the 500k TIGER Cartographic Boundary Shapefiles.
The ARts and Cultural Production Satellite Account highlights the economic impact of music groups, museums, photography, and more, including contributions to GDP, output, employment, and compensation. These data also include supporting arts industries, such as broadcasting and manufacturing.
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Information about this release can be found here (https://www.bea.gov/data/gdp/gdp-state).
For information about BEA industries and other regional definitions, visit their Regional Economic Accounts: Regional Definitions website (https://apps.bea.gov/regional/definitions/).
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This dataset provides both quarterly and annual estimates of the value of the goods and services produced in Iowa as provided by the U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis in tables SAGDP2N, SAGDP9N, SAGDP10N, SQGDP2, and SQGDP9. Annual data is available beginning in 1997, and quarterly beginning 2005. The data include breakdowns of industries' contributions. Quarterly estimates are presented as an annual rate.
Gross domestic product (GDP) is the measure of the market value of all final goods and services produced within Iowa in a particular period of time. In concept, an industry's GDP by state, referred to as its "value added", is equivalent to its gross output (sales or receipts and other operating income, commodity taxes, and inventory change) minus its intermediate inputs (consumption of goods and services purchased from other U.S. industries or imported). The Iowa GDP a state counterpart to the Nation's GDP, the Bureau's featured and most comprehensive measure of U.S. economic activity. Iowa GDP differs from national GDP for the following reasons: Iowa GDP excludes and national GDP includes the compensation of federal civilian and military personnel stationed abroad and government consumption of fixed capital for military structures located abroad and for military equipment, except office equipment; and Iowa GDP and national GDP have different revision schedules. GDP is reported in millions of current dollars.
Real GDP is an inflation-adjusted measure of Iowa's gross product that is based on national prices for the goods and services produced within Iowa. The real estimates of gross domestic product (GDP) are measured in millions of chained dollars.
The annual per capita real GDP is also provided and is measured in chained dollars. In calculating the per capita real GDP, the real GDP is divided by the Census Bureau’s annual midyear (July 1) population estimates for the year.
This map shows the relationship between natural resources and oil extraction Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in the US by counties, states, regions, and nationwide. Natural resources and oil is defined by the North American Industry Classification System NAICS) 11, 21. Includes agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting; and mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction.GDP is the value of goods and services produced within a county. The underlying Living Atlas layer contains 2019 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) estimates from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) for the nation, regions, states, and counties. Breakdowns by industry available, using North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) groups. Table CAGDP2, downloaded February 2, 2021.https://www.bea.gov/data/gdp/gdp-county-metro-and-other-areas Null values are either due to the data being unavailable, or not shown to avoid disclosure of confidential information (in these cases, estimates are included in higher-level totals).The percentages of the next highest geography level's GDP are also available, i.e. regions have percentages for nation's GDP, states have percentages of their region's GDP, and counties have percentages of their state's GDP. If the GPD estimate is unavailable, so is the percentage. If a percentage of state is listed as 0.0 but there is a value for GDP, then this value is <0.1, which rounds to zero. Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding and null values.Combined Counties:Kalawao County, Hawaii is combined with Maui County. Separate estimates for the jurisdictions making up the combination areas are not available.Virginia combination areas consist of one or two independent cities with 1980 populations of less than 100,000 combined with an adjacent county. The county name appears first, followed by the city name(s). Separate estimates for the jurisdictions making up the combination area are not available. Bedford County, VA includes the independent city of Bedford for all years.Boundaries used to create regions and counties:Boundaries for this layer were created using the Dissolve geoprocessing tool in Pro and the regional and combined county definitions from BEA.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
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U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, Total Real Gross Domestic Product by Industry for Connecticut [CTRQGSP], retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CTRQGSP
Units: Millions of Chained 2012 Dollars, Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate
Updated quarterly.
This dataset was downloaded from bea.gov, the U.S Bureau of Economic Analysis provides this data to be downloaded.
The dataset contains GDP numbers for each state divided into different industries as they progress from 1997 to 2021.
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License information was derived automatically