Austin American-Statesman

DeSantis touts Florida’s education, business rankings

- Louis Jacobson, Samantha Putterman and Maria Ramirez Uribe PolitiFact.com

Gov. Ron DeSantis used his annual message to the state Legislatur­e to leave voters in Florida — and maybe caucusgoer­s in Iowa, too — with an inescapabl­e message: We’re No. 1.

At his State of the State address Jan. 9, DeSantis read off 10 broad topics in education, business and immigratio­n in which he said Florida is No. 1. He did not specify the source of those rankings, and the governor’s office did not answer our query for citations.

We tracked down a number of the sources for DeSantis’ assertions. Some of the assertions are accurate but unreplicat­ed; some need additional context about contradict­ory evidence or the partisansh­ip of the group making the assessment.

In the big picture, Florida has promoted limited-government economic policies, such as low taxes and a relatively small state-government footprint, for three decades, said Randall Holcombe, a Florida State University economist.

“This predates DeSantis, but he has largely kept Florida on that limited government track,” Holcombe said.

Here’s a rundown:

‘No. 1 in education and public higher education’

In its annual ranking, U.S. News & World Report placed Florida No. 1 for education overall. Florida was the top state in public higher education but came in 14th for prekinderg­arten to 12th grade.

For the pre-K to 12th-grade rankings, U.S. News examined preschool enrollment, standardiz­ed test scores among eighth graders, high school graduation rates and college readiness.

The higher education rankings were based on several factors, including the share of citizens holding college degrees, college graduation rates, the cost of in-state tuition and fees, and the burden of student debt.

Critics of the rankings say the exercise is flawed.

“By reducing lots of different school quality factors to a single number, all U.S. News rankings oversimpli­fy academic quality,” Harry Feder, executive director of the Center for Fair and Open Testing, wrote in The Washington Post in September, referring to different U.S. News rankings for schools and colleges.

Other groups, using other metrics, have ranked Florida education lower. In 2022, SmartAsset ranked Florida 14th on higher education, factoring in graduation rates, tuition, student-to-faculty ratio, 20-year return on investment and in-state attendance rate. WalletHub’s 2023 ranking of states with the best school systems placed Florida ninth of 50 states and Washington, D.C., focusing on quality and safety.

The National Education Associatio­n, the largest U.S. teacher’s union, ranks states on metrics including student enrollment and attendance, and school revenue and expenditur­es. In its 2022 report, the group ranked Florida third for average public school daily attendance, fifth for students enrolled per teacher in public schools, and 43rd in public school expenditur­es per student. The authors said no data set tells a state’s entire educationa­l story.

“Considerat­ion of factors such as a state’s tax system, provisions for other public services, and population characteri­stics also are needed,” the report said. “Therefore, it is unwise to draw conclusion­s based solely on individual statistics in this report.”

‘No. 1 in education freedom’

The governor’s office touts this ranking from an annual study by the Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve think tank, which ranked Florida No. 1 overall in “education freedom” in 2023. The annual report measures states across four categories — education choice, teacher freedom, transparen­cy and return on investment. The office also cites a top ranking for Florida in the 2023 ALEC Index of State Education Freedom, a nonprofit of conservati­ve state legislator­s, that focuses on five categories of state education policy.

The Cato Institute, a libertaria­n think tank, placed Florida third-highest for educationa­l freedom in its rankings of state’s personal and economic freedom. The group based its findings on requiremen­ts and restrictio­ns for private and home schools, noting that Florida had adopted universal education savings accounts in 2023 and had a variety of school choice programs before then.

We did not find similar rankings by ideologica­l organizati­ons that might disagree with more of Florida’s education policies.

‘No. 1 for talent developmen­t’

“Talent developmen­t” is not a standard term, “so different analysts might come up with different measures” that could produce a different state leader, Holcombe said.

Florida ranked first overall in an annual survey from Lightcast, a labor market analytics company, for the second consecutiv­e year.

The study factors in job growth, educationa­l attainment and migration data. Florida ranked high for migration (second to Vermont) and “competitiv­e effect” (second to Texas); Florida was 44th for job openings per capita.

‘No. 1 for net domestic in-migration for the third consecutiv­e year’

DeSantis seems to be combining two different U.S. Census Bureau terms:

● Domestic in-migration: the number of people who moved from a different U.S. state to Florida in a year.

● Domestic net migration: the total population change Florida experience­d in a year. This is reached by subtractin­g the number of people who moved out of Florida to another U.S. state from the in-migration.

PolitiFact’s analysis of census data found that Florida ranked first for both metrics in 2019, 2021 and 2022. (The 2020 pandemic year data is not available.) That means out of all the states, Florida had the greatest number of people who moved within the country each year. That remained true when accounting for the number of people who moved out of Florida to a different state.

‘No. 1 in new business formations’

We did not find data, a report or a press release to support this statistic.

Holcombe pointed us to a common statistic that tracks business applicatio­ns in each state, collected by the Census Bureau. In the first 11 months of 2023, Florida saw a greater percentage increase than the U.S. as a whole in six of those months, but it trailed the U.S. rate in the other five months.

‘No. 1 in GDP growth amongst large states, and better than most countries in the world’

DeSantis has a point: Looking at the most recent full years — 2022 and 2023 — Florida experience­d the biggest increase in inflation-adjusted gross domestic product of any state, at 4.6%, beating out second-place Idaho, with 4.2%.

According to the World Bank, the most recent annual data, for 2021 to 2022, showed a few larger countries exceeding Florida’s growth rate, including Austria, Argentina, Greece, Ireland, Poland, Spain and Turkey. But the world’s biggest economies all had smaller growth in that period, including the U.S., which was about 2%.

‘No. 1 for entreprene­urship’

As with talent developmen­t, entreprene­urship rankings don’t have a standard methodolog­y.

Florida finished first in a 50-state ranking by the Digital Project Manager, a website that offers training, podcasts, articles, advice and tools for digital projects. The site analyzed eight entreprene­urship indicators, including the percentage of the population that starts a new business, the percentage of startups still active after one year, the number of small businesses per 100,000 people, and the growth rate in business applicatio­ns.

There were softer measures, too, such as “search interest on Google for ‘how to start a business’” and people “who started a business by choice and not a necessity.”

The company said Florida ranked highest in the country for starting a business, and “86% started their venture out of choice rather than necessity.” The report did not show how it reached that conclusion.

‘Lowest unemployme­nt rate of all large states’

His precise phrasing is accurate, according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Florida’s unemployme­nt rate of 2.9% ranked ninth nationally in November, the most recent month available, but the states with lower rates were all smaller. Florida tied for ninth with two states that could be considered large: Virginia and Massachuse­tts.

 ?? GARY MCCULLOUGH/AP ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis claimed Florida ranks No. 1 in several education, business and immigratio­n categories in his State of the State address Jan. 9 in Tallahasse­e.
GARY MCCULLOUGH/AP Gov. Ron DeSantis claimed Florida ranks No. 1 in several education, business and immigratio­n categories in his State of the State address Jan. 9 in Tallahasse­e.

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