Most unfortunately, the government issue of unsustainable promises — and the unaffordable list of long-term liabilities thereby incurred — is hardly a uniquely federal habit. George Mason University’s Mercatus Center is out with another study on the statuses of the fifty states, this time taking a look at their various abilities to keep up with their financial obligations in the face of ongoing state budget challenges. Hint: “Fiscal simulations by the Government Accountability Office suggest that despite recent gains in tax revenues and pension assets, the long-term outlook for states’ fiscal condition is negative (GAO 2013).” Ouch.

Using 2012 data, the research takes a look at four different indices for measuring states’ solvency, including…

Cash Solvency A state’s cash solvency takes into account the cash the state can easily access to pay its bills in the near term, reflecting the state government’s liquidity. The map below indicates that most states have enough cash on hand to meet their short-term obligations. Budget Solvency A state’s budget solvency is its ability to create enough revenue to cover its expenditures over a fiscal year. Budget solvency varies greatly across states. As the map below shows, in fiscal year 2012-13 states had an operating ratio below 1, indicating a budget deficit.

… as well as long-run solvency (how much a state can use incoming revenue to cover all its expenditures, including long-term obligations like guaranteed pension benefits and infrastructure maintenance) and service-level solvency (whether state governments have enough resources to provide their residents with an adequate level of services). After combining and weighting the four indices to create an overall fiscal-condition index, the five states in the best shape were Alaska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Nebraska, and Wyoming, while the five in the worst shape were California, Massachusetts, Illinois, Connecticut, and New Jersey coming in dead last. (Quite the red vs. blue dichotomy there, eh? Just sayin.’)