Insights & Perspectives

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Spotlight On

State Fiscal Policy

Managing a state’s finances—whether working to erase a budget deficit or reaching consensus on what to do with a surplus—is challenging.
Local Governments Face Billions in Infrastructure Maintenance

Are states investing enough in roads and bridges to prevent them from falling apart and to avoid leaving future generations on the hook for a costly repair bill? Historically, a lack of consistent information on the condition and needs of this infrastructure in states has limited policymakers’ ability to answer this question, prevented governments from making fully informed investment decisions to address maintenance backlogs, and hindered public accountability and transparency about whether decisions are fiscally sustainable.

As Federal Funding Landscape Shifts, States Brace for Fiscal Impact

There’s a saying in the state budget world that there is no such thing as a “normal” budget cycle. Part of the budgeting process requires allowing for unforeseen events.

Governors Address Fiscal Challenges in 2025 Speeches

In their 2025 State of the State addresses, governors throughout the nation raised concerns about budgetary constraints, revenue shortfalls, and the difficult decisions they face in balancing their states’ budgets. Many states are grappling with declining revenues because of the expiration of federal pandemic aid; slowing economic growth; and rising costs in areas such as health care, education, and public safety.

How Shifting Demographics Are Reshaping State Finances

It’s a truism that demography is destiny—and that includes the financial destiny of states. Although the population of the 50 states grew at its fastest rate in nearly a quarter of a century last year, increasing by almost 1% between mid-2023 and mid-2024, and nearly all states gained residents—driven mostly by domestic and international migration—these numbers don’t tell the full story.

States Should Plan for Use of Excess Reserve Funds

The unprecedented revenue wave that states experienced from mid-2020 to the end of 2022—attributed to multiple factors, including the influx of federal funds to confront the COVID-19 pandemic—enabled policymakers to make massive deposits into their rainy day funds. Several states filled these reserve accounts to their legal limits.

Trust Magazine
Trust magazine features Pew’s efforts to address challenges by illuminating issues, creating common ground, and advancing ambitious projects.
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Conserving vast lands and waters, improving citizens' interactions with the courts, removing impediments to medical care, and more—Pew has helped find solutions that allow people to thrive and communities to flourish.
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After The Fact

Host Dan LeDuc and guests guide listeners through analysis, research, and personal stories that go behind the facts and bring the data to life.
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Analysis of the facts, numbers, and trends shaping the world
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Americans' trust in our national institutions is at historic lows. How do we restore it?
Our subsidiary, Pew Research Center is a nonpartisan fact tank that informs the public about the issues, attitudes and trends shaping the world. We conduct public opinion polling, demographic research, content analysis and other data-driven social science research. We do not take policy positions.

The Rundown

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7 Stories Show How Conservation Helps Nature and People

Conserving natural spaces conveys benefits far beyond the obvious gains to wildlife and their habitats. As scores of studies show, protecting and restoring lands and waters, particularly when done in close partnership with local communities, also improves economies—and people’s lives. Here are videos from seven experts at The Pew Charitable Trusts saying how collective action is helping yield those benefits around the globe.

Governors Address Fiscal Challenges in 2025 Speeches

In their 2025 State of the State addresses, governors throughout the nation raised concerns about budgetary constraints, revenue shortfalls, and the difficult decisions they face in balancing their states’ budgets. Many states are grappling with declining revenues because of the expiration of federal pandemic aid; slowing economic growth; and rising costs in areas such as health care, education, and public safety.

What the Data Says About Immigrants in the U.S.

Pew Research Center

3 Key Principles for Building Disaster-Ready State Budgets

Since 2020, the U.S. has experienced an average of 23 disasters a year that caused at least $1 billion of destruction each, and policymakers at every level of government are grappling with those rising costs. Research from The Pew Charitable Trusts shows that states lack data on public disaster spending, their budgeting approaches are not well adapted to current needs, and their efforts to reduce risks to life and property are inadequately funded.

How Does Your State's Public Retirement System Perform

Public retirement systems aim to balance providing plans that support government workforce objectives and ensuring that the cost of benefits is stable and sustainable over the long term, all while putting workers on a pathway to retirement security.

5 Policies to Help Curb Housing Costs Immediately

An estimated nationwide shortage of 4 to 7 million homes has pushed rents to all-time highs, with a record share of Americans spending more than 30% of their income on rent.