Skip to content

Indiana Is The Fourth Most Miserable State In The Union

Written on February 7, 2017 by Around Us

Categories: Around Us

Tags:

INDIANAPOLIS — If you’re unhappy living in Indiana, you’re not alone.

Indiana ranked the fourth most miserable state, according to the financial news and opinion web site 24/7 Wall St.

24/7 Wall Street used data from a survey of 177,281 people by Gallup and Heathways to measure all 50 states by well-being, using metrics such as physical fitness and community pride. Only West Virginia, Oklahoma and Kentucky fared worse than the Hoosier state.

“The index measures whether individuals feel a sense of purpose, have supportive relationships, are financially secure, are satisfied with their community, and are in good physical health,” 24/7 Wall Street said. “According to the survey, Hawaii residents report the highest well-being, West Virginia’s the lowest.”

The survey found 31.3 percent of Indiana residents are obese, 30.6 smoke, and 29.4 percent don’t exercise at all. Indiana also is one of the worst educated states with only 24.9 of adults with a bachelor’s degree and has a low median household income to match.

“A shallow talent pool may be one reason behind the state’s low median household income, which at $50,532 is approximately $5,000 less than the national median income,” 24/7 Wall Street said.

Indiana does not stack up well against other states, the index found. It has the 9th lowest percentage of adults with bachelor’s degrees, the 15th highest obesity rate, and the 25th highest poverty rate of 14.5 percent.

How bad is it in Indiana? Pretty bad, according to 24/7 Wall Street.

“Indiana is one of just a handful of states to rank worse in every category of well-being — sense of purpose, social life, financial health, community pride, and physical fitness — than most other states,” 24/7 Wall Street said.

Source: NWI Times 

Powered by WordPress