Community Corner
Best And Worst States For Women: Georgia Ranks In Bottom 10
Georgia received poor marks for its female unemployment rate, a low high school graduation rate and a high number of uninsured women.

ATLANTA, GA — The #MeToo and #TimesUp movements may not have reached five Southern states that finished at the bottom of a study of the best and worst states for women released Monday. Georgia placed in the bottom ten of all states, ranked 43rd in the WalletHub study, released during National Women's History Month.
Louisiana was at the bottom of the list, along with Arkansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma and Alabama. With the exception of Nevada, all other states in the bottom 10 were in the South. Georgia received poor marks for its female unemployment rate, a low high school graduation rate and a high number of uninsured women.
The five best states for women to live are Minnesota, Massachusetts, Vermont, North Dakota and Wisconsin.
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In its study, 2018's Best & Worst States for Women, WalletHub looked at data ranging from women's earnings, the percentage of women-owned businesses and unemployment rates to preventative health care, female homicide rates, and the incidence of rape and stalking in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
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What do you think of Georgia's ranking? Does it reflect what you experience?
Georgia ranked 43rd in the category of women's economic and social wellbeing, and 39th for health and safety, the report said. Other criteria where Georgia placed in the bottom five states were: tied for 47th for the high female unemployment rate; 49th for its low high school graduation rate among women; and tied for 46th for the high number of uninsured women.
Some other findings:
- The District of Columbia, home to the U.S. Capitol, ranked 15th as the best place for women to live. When adjusted for inflation, women there had the highest median wage of $32,355, compared to $16,843 in Hawaii, which had the lowest rate.
- D.C. women were also much more politically involved than women in Hawaii, voting in the 2016 presidential election at a rate of 77.2 percent, 1.6 times higher than in Hawaii, where only 49.3 percent of women voted.
- New Hampshire had the lowest share of women living in poverty — only 9.4 percent, which was 2.6 times lower than in Mississippi, which finished 51st in that ranking. Nearly one-fourth of Mississippi women live in poverty.
- Most women in Massachusetts have health insurance with an uninsured rate of 2.4 percent, which is 7.7 times lower than Texas, which finished dead last with an uninsured rate of 18.5 percent for women.
The ranking used data from the federal Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Center for Educational Statistics, as well as the Council for Community and Economic Research, U.S. News and World Report, Institute for Health Metrics and its own research. Read more about the methodology.
PHOTO: An activist holds a #MeToo sign during a news conference on a Title IX lawsuit outside the Department of Education January 25, 2018 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)
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