The Self-Inflicted Economic Death of Ohio

Chester Finn has a good Wall Street Journal article on the economic decay of Ohio – largely caused by its own state policies.

Ohio already has the fifth-heaviest state and local tax burden in the country (up from 30th in 1990) and finds itself stagnating. Its unemployment rate, 6.3%, is above the national rate of 5.5%, even as the state’s work force shrinks as people emigrate. Ohio’s median household income is also falling – in 2006 it was $44,500, down 0.5% from the previous year – while the national figure ($48,500) was up 1.6%. During the closing decades of the 20th century, incomes rose twice as fast across the country as in Ohio.

This should offers some lessons for Pennsylvania and other states … on what not to do.