Submitted by Tyler Durden on
04/02/2013
Every two years the 50 states
compete for the title of "Most Free State," and George Mason University's Mercatus
Center rankings based on 200 factors generalized under Fiscal
Policy, Regulatory Policy, and Personal Freedom, provide significant
color on just how free (or not) the various states are. New Hampshire was the
'free-est' state in 2011 but fell to 4th this year as North Dakota is
2013's 'free-est' state. New York and California bring up the
rear as the least free states but the following clip and charts show
just where the freedom is spreading - Georgia, Arizona, and Idaho; and where it
is not - Oregon, Kansas, and Colarado.
Overall Freedom
The overall freedom ranking is
determined by combining scores for fiscal, regulatory, and personal freedom.
Economic Freedom
Economic freedom includes fiscal
and regulatory policy.
Fiscal
Policy (35.3%)
The
fiscal policy dimension consists of the following categories: Tax
Burden (28.6%), Government
Employment (2.8%), Government
Spending (1.9%), Government
Debt (1.2%), and Fiscal
Decentralization (0.9%).
Regulatory
Policy (32.0%)
The
regulatory policy dimension consists of the following categories: Freedom
from Tort Abuse (11.5%), Property
Right Protection (7.6%), Health
Insurance Freedom (5.4%), Labor
Market Freedom (3.8%), Occupational
Licensing Freedom (1.7%), Miscellaneous
Regulatory Freedom (1.3%), and Cable
and Telecom Freedom (0.8%).
Personal
Freedom (32.7%)
Personal
freedom dimension consists of the following categories: Victimless
Crime Freedom (9.8%), Gun
Control Freedom (6.6%), Tobacco
Freedom (4.1%), Alcohol
Freedom (2.8%), Marriage
Freedom (2.1%), Marijuana
and Salvia Freedom (2.1%), Gambling
Freedom (2.0%), Education
Policy (1.9%), Civil
Liberties (0.6%), Travel Freedom
(0.5%), Asset
Forfeiture Freedom (0.1%), and Campaign
Finance Freedom (0.02%).
Source:
Mercatus Center, George Mason University