Here are some bullet points on the economics of the election:
Digital Nation vs Physical Nation | ||
Digital Nation | Physical Nation | |
Productivity growth rate (2000-2015) | 2.7% | 0.7% |
Real compensation per worker, growth rate (2000-2015) |
1.3% | 0.8% |
Employment growth rate (2000-2015) | 1.3% | 1.4%
0.1% (without healthcare) |
Share of private sector employment (2015) | 25% | 75% |
Share of private sector compensation (2015) | 35% |
65%
|
Share of IT investment (2015) | 75% |
25%
|
Annual price change | 0.8% |
2.4%
|
Data: BEA, BLS, author calculations
The split between the digital and the physical sector was first described in Mandel (2016). Numbers may differ slightly from earlier calculations. |
4. The Digital Nation is concentrated in blue states. States that voted for Clinton in this election averaged 35% digital, while states that voted for Trump are 23% digital on average. Here are the top states, measured by share of private sector GDP coming from the digital sector.
Top Digital States | |
Share of private economy that is digital | |
DC | 49.9% |
Delaware | 47.8% |
New York | 43.8% |
Massachusetts | 37.7% |
Oregon | 37.4% |
Connecticut | 34.3% |
Virginia | 33.5% |
California | 33.5% |
Colorado | 32.5% |
Rhode Island | 31.5% |
Maryland | 31.1% |
Georgia | 30.8% |
NH | 30.4% |
Illinois | 30.1% |
New Jersey | 29.8% |
Minnesota | 29.8% |
Washington | 29.4% |
Missouri | 28.0% |
North Carolina | 27.7% |
Utah | 27.6% |
Pennsylvania | 27.2% |
Arizona | 26.8% |
Florida | 26.5% |
South Dakota | 26.3% |
Ohio | 25.8% |
Nebraska | 23.5% |
Kansas | 23.3% |
Michigan | 23.3% |
Wisconsin | 23.2% |
Data: BEA, author calculations |
Next: How trade and productivity growth have affected the Physical Nation