Educational Attainment
Educational attainment is one critical driver of long-run income, job, and population growth for nations, states, and local areas. More broadly, regions with higher concentrations of highly educated residents tend to perform better across many socioeconomic indicators, including the crime rate, poverty, productivity, unemployment, and others. In addition, less educated residents also tend to earn higher wages in regions with a larger concentration of college graduates.
Source: University of Arizona
High School Graduation Rates
The high school graduation rate for the U.S. rose from 79.0% in 2011 to 85.3% in 2018, an increase of 6.3 percentage points over seven years. During the same seven-year period, the percent of high school students graduating on time in Arizona peaked in 2016 at 79.5%, dropped in 2017 to 78.0% and experienced a small increase to 78.7% in 2018.
Four-Year College Attainment Rates
Educational attainment rates vary significantly by race, ethnicity, and age.
Population 25+ with a Bachelor's Degree or Higher
Source: University of Arizona
Source: University of Arizona
Source: University of Arizona
Source: University of Arizona
Health Care
This baseline data tracks important COVID-19 statistics to show changes from the onset, throughout the recovery period, and beyond.
Economy
Economic metrics provide a snapshot of the status of Arizona’s economy and tracks progress toward economic recovery.
Real Estate
Arizona’s housing market and commercial real estate sectors will be key indicators during the post COVID-19 recovery.
Workforce
Monitoring workforce, job creation and retention, and talent pipeline data is fundamental to supporting the economy.