Countdown to shutdown:

Four things to know about where in the US DoD spends its money

California brought home the most money from DoD in 2017.

The Defense Department budget tends to be daunting in size. This year the White House is requesting $750 billion dollars. But they say “all politics is local,” and that money does end up in individual states and counties.

The Office of Economic Adjustment recently released its report on defense spending by state for 2017. Federal News Network collected some of the interesting takeaways that might be right in your backyard.

Data sources: DoD’s Defense Manpower Data Center; DoD’s Procurement and Acquisition Policy; D’s Military Installations, Ranges and Training Areas; USASpending.gov; U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis; U.S. Census Bureau; and Unitedstateszipcodes.org
Image Source: Defense Spending by State: Fiscal Year 2017, U.S. Department of Defense Office of Economic Adjustment

California is king

Yes, not only is California the most populous state, but it benefits the most financially from the Defense Department. In 2017, the Golden State brought home $49 billion in total defense spending. California also brought in the most contract spending at $35.2 billion of the $49 billion.

That doesn’t mean California’s economy is dependent on DoD, however. Defense spending only accounts for 1.7 percent on the state’s gross domestic product. That’s a far cry from the nation’s most defense-dependent state, Virginia, where 8.9 percent of the state’s GDP is caught up in defense-related funding.

Virginia came in second place for grabbing the most defense spending with $46.2 billion. Fairfax County alone brought in $13.7 billion from DoD.

Other states rounding out the top ten for the most defense spending in order include Texas at number three then Maryland, Florida, Washington, Connecticut, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Alabama.

The Northwest quadrant wasn’t getting much

With the exception of Washington, the Northwest quadrant doesn’t see much spending from DoD compared to the other states. Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska all had less than $400 million each in defense funding come their way.

A couple of other states outside of the Northwest quarter of the nation that also saw low spending: Iowa, Delaware, Vermont, West Virginia, Maine and Minnesota.

Extremely rural areas just haven’t gotten the investment from DoD like other states. That may be because of the lack of defense-critical businesses based there or also because there just aren’t a lot of bases in those states.

Image Source: Defense Spending by State: Fiscal Year 2017, U.S. Department of Defense Office of Economic Adjustment

Washington D.C. was heavy in service contracts

For Washington, 2017 was full of service contracts. The district saw $3.7 billion in contract spending that year and 75 percent of it went to service contracts. Some of the main winners of those contracts were Booz Allen Hamilton, CRSA, Hewlett-Packard, the RAND Corporation, CACI and General Dynamics.

Unsurprisingly, DoD also paid out $2.4 billion in payroll to DoD personnel in Washington. DoD employed 25,225 people in 2017 in D.C. Nearly 13,000 were civilian, almost 8,000 were active duty military and the rest were Guard and Reserve.

Personnel spending is exactly where you’d expect it

The Defense Department spent $135.3 billion on personnel in 2017. More than half of that went to 10 states and it’s just the states you’d expect. States with bases and huge military hubs got the most personnel spending. Virginia, which has a heavy military installations presence, got the most in personnel spending with $15.7 billion. Not far behind was California, which housed the most military personnel at 247,000, with $13.8 billion.

Texas came in third with $11 billion, followed by Maryland, North Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Washington, Hawaii and Colorado.

Image Source: Defense Spending by State: Fiscal Year 2017, U.S. Department of Defense Office of Economic Adjustment

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

Related Stories

    AP/Cliff OwenRep. Adam Smith

    House Armed Services chairman says Democrats open to fairly big defense budget

    Read more

    Administration proposes $750B defense budget via huge increase in OCO spending

    Read more