Do you also agree with the assessment that the highest income earners heavily subsidize the poor? Because that's the same reasoning behind the "blue states subsidize red states" trope.
The federal balance of payments with the various states is a function of tax receipts from that state against federal spending in that state. States with lots of high income earners will, by progressive taxation, naturally contribute more to the federal pool. States with lots of recipients of federal benefits, on the flip side of the coin, naturally receive more from the federal pool. There are outlier states on either side.
Looking at 2019 data as the last "normal" year (since post-Covid, every single state received more in federal spending than they gave in taxes), Connecticut, Massaschusetts, and New Jersey (all blue states) are the clear outliers in per-capita balance of payments, where each resident in net gave north of $2000. Among outliers in the receivers, Kentucky, New Mexico, and Virginia (one red state, two blue states) stand out . KY I'm not sure why, but NM and VA are clear destinations for lots and lots of federal spending, with many federal programs being run in those states. California is touted as "paying" for a lot of stuff, but on a per capita basis it was only about $300.
Among the rest, there are a good mix of red states and blue states that receive more than they pay. Alabama? Red state, net recipient. Maryland? Blue state, net recipient. Utah? Red state, net payer. Washington? Blue state, net payer.
That having been said, the implicit argument behind your point is that blue states are rich because of their blue policies and red states are poor because of their red policies. I have yet to be convinced of this.
The federal balance of payments with the various states is a function of tax receipts from that state against federal spending in that state. States with lots of high income earners will, by progressive taxation, naturally contribute more to the federal pool. States with lots of recipients of federal benefits, on the flip side of the coin, naturally receive more from the federal pool. There are outlier states on either side.
Looking at 2019 data as the last "normal" year (since post-Covid, every single state received more in federal spending than they gave in taxes), Connecticut, Massaschusetts, and New Jersey (all blue states) are the clear outliers in per-capita balance of payments, where each resident in net gave north of $2000. Among outliers in the receivers, Kentucky, New Mexico, and Virginia (one red state, two blue states) stand out . KY I'm not sure why, but NM and VA are clear destinations for lots and lots of federal spending, with many federal programs being run in those states. California is touted as "paying" for a lot of stuff, but on a per capita basis it was only about $300.
Among the rest, there are a good mix of red states and blue states that receive more than they pay. Alabama? Red state, net recipient. Maryland? Blue state, net recipient. Utah? Red state, net payer. Washington? Blue state, net payer.
That having been said, the implicit argument behind your point is that blue states are rich because of their blue policies and red states are poor because of their red policies. I have yet to be convinced of this.