Politics & Government

Here’s How Free Connecticut Is Compared To Everyone Else

The U.S. is one of the freest countries in the world. Here's how free Connecticut is compared to rest of the states.

Connecticut has been ranked the 33rd freest state in America, according to a new report from a libertarian think tank. The right-leaning Cato Institute published its "Freedom in the 50 States" report this month. The study is based on how each state’s policies promote fiscal, regulatory and personal freedom.

The researchers collected data on more than 230 state and local public policies that impact individual freedom. Florida was crowned the freest state in America while New Hampshire and West Virginia have seen the most improvement in expanding personal liberties.

Connecticut fell between Kentucky and West Virginia in the overall freedom rankings. Our best rankings came in Marriage and Travel and our worst fell in Campaign Finance and Tobacco. (Keep up with CT events and news by subscribing to Patch to receive daily newsletters and breaking news alerts.)

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Here’s how Connecticut ranked in each category:

Fiscal: 14
Regulatory: 41
Personal: 39
Economic: 31
Lawsuit: 37
Land: 40
Marriage: 1 (Tie)
Education: 41
Occupational: 18
Victimless: 15
Health insurance: 45 (Tie)
Labor: 38
Alcohol: 19
Asset Forfeiture: 12
Gambling: 27 (Tie)
Tobacco: 47
Guns: 44
Cannabis: 22
Cable: 42 (Tie)
Incarceration: 15
Travel: 11
Miscellaneous: 44
Campaign finance: 50

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Connecticut fell three spots from 2014. Here’s what the authors had to say:

Connecticut is a middling state that is below average on overall freedom and falls about halfway between its freer neighbor, Massachusetts, and its less free one, Rhode Island. It suffers most from having consistently stifling regulatory policy that drags down its economic freedom ranking while, perhaps surprisingly for a New England "blue" state, also performing relatively poorly on personal freedom as other states have leapfrogged it.

Measuring freedom is important because people value it, the authors wrote. The U.S. has made great strides when it comes to respecting an individual’s rights regardless of race, sex, age or sexual preference, but some people are facing increasing threats to their interests, the Cato Institute said

The report said groups seeing their personal liberties slide include smokers, builders, affordable housing buyers, aspiring professionals who want to ply a trade without paying “onerous examination and education costs,” and less-skilled workers who’ve been “priced out of the market by minimum wage laws.”

Here are the top 10 freest states, according to the Cato Institute report:

  1. Florida
  2. New Hampshire
  3. Indiana
  4. Colorado
  5. Nevada
  6. North Dakota
  7. Tennessee
  8. South Dakota
  9. Arizona
  10. Kansas

Florida and New Hampshire significantly outpaced the other top five states, the authors noted.

“Florida’s rise since 2009 has been nothing short of stunning,” the study said. “While most states have improved on freedom in that time if federalized policies are excluded, Florida’s post-2010 improvement has been the third-greatest in the United States (after Wisconsin and Alaska).”

States that have always performed well in the index — North Dakota, South Dakota,Arizona and Tennessee — once again found themselves in the top 10.

New York is the least free state, as it has been every year of the index since 2000. Hawaii has fallen far enough to put itself well under California, the authors wrote. New Jersey and Vermont rounded out the bottom five.

“New York has been the least free state in the country for a long time,” the study said. “Economic freedom is the most significant weakness, but the state has not kept up with the rest of the country on personal freedom either.”

Click here to read the full report on the Cato Institute website.

— Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

Image via Shutterstock

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