National Trends in State Funding for Children and YouthHow much do states spend on programs and services for children and youth? Our latest national analysis examines this question by looking at how states use state, federal, and federal relief funding to support children and youth from cradle-to-career. It includes data from the 14 members of our pilot state child and youth fiscal mapping cohort: Alaska, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and New York (fiscal map link forthcoming). Explore the tool below, read our frequently asked questions, or contact us to provide feedback about the analysis.Filed under:Infants and Toddlers, Early Childhood, Middle Childhood, Youth, Young Adults, Advocates/Intermediaries, Funders, Policymakers/Agency Leaders, Database, Fiscal Mapping Database Frequently asked questions What Is a Fiscal Map?A fiscal map documents and analyzes the various sources of funding that support programs and services for children and youth in a state, city, county, or Native nation. The map can include public dollars from federal, state, and local sources and sometimes private dollars from foundations and other philanthropies if appropriate. It answers a fundamental question: WHO invests HOW MUCH money and in WHAT? We support fiscal maps to better understand public spending on children and youth programs nationwide. Fiscal maps help state and local leaders and advocates understand the existing funding streams that support child- and youth-focused programs and services. Why Did Children’s Funding Project Conduct This Analysis?Beginning in 2022, we set out to standardize the process of tracking and documenting public funding for services and programs for kids through our state child and youth fiscal mapping cohort. In the first round of data collection, we worked with partners in 14 states to create fiscal maps of state, federal, and federal relief funding invested in children and youth ages 0-24 for fiscal years 2019-2021. In addition to making fiscal data comparable across states, this analysis also makes funding data publicly available to state leaders, policymakers, advocates, and public employees to support their decision-making and advance strategic public financing efforts for children and youth. Each of the 14 participating states has an individual fiscal map that analyzes how the state invested state, federal, and federal relief funds across various service categories, eligibility criteria, and age ranges. The fiscal maps also highlight what percentage of total state revenue each state invests in children and youth. What Information Does the National Analysis Contain?The first page of the report breaks down the share of state, federal, and federal relief funding that comprises each state’s funding landscape for children and youth. The second page highlights the percentage of state-generated revenue invested and the per capita of state funding invested in ages 0-24, apart from K-12 public education. At Children’s Funding Project, we focus on funding for the services and supports that help children and youth learn and develop outside of the classroom. Consequently, we removed mandatory state funding for K-12 public education from this analysis. Also, states differ in how local education districts support school funding. Lastly, the third and fourth pages highlight state investments across various outcome categories and levels of intervention. Does Children’s Funding Project Plan to Update This Analysis in the Future?Yes! This national analysis is our first attempt at visualizing trends in state funding for children and youth nationwide, and this first round of the state child and youth fiscal mapping cohort has been a pilot year. We hope to continue our research to understand these trends and are currently recruiting new states to participate in our state child and youth fiscal mapping cohort. How Can I Learn More About the Analysis?Watch the webinar recording where we introduce and explain how to navigate the database. We also highlight some of the states that were part of the national analysis and how they’ve used their data. You can learn more in the webinar slides.Send us your feedback If you are interested in adding your state’s data to the cohort, or seeing data behind any of the state fiscal maps, please contact us.More Resources Publication Last Vote to First Dollar Toolkit An implementation toolkit to help leaders of new voter-approved children's funds set their funds up for success Publication Tracking the Flow of Federal Funding for Children and Youth An interactive chart that illustrates how federal funds flow through agencies and into communities Updates and Events Insights November 11, 2024 After-School Programs Offer an Antidote to Social Media Harms. Big Tech Settlements Should Foot the Bill. News November 6, 2024 Voters in Local Communities Approve Up to $133 Million for Kids in the 2024 Election News October 30, 2024 Multnomah County’s Preschool for All Shows Communities How to Expand Preschool Access and Still Preserve Infant and Toddler Child Care Please add some images to the gallery to activate the preview Close Share it! Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Click to copy URL Link Copied!
Publication Last Vote to First Dollar Toolkit An implementation toolkit to help leaders of new voter-approved children's funds set their funds up for success
Publication Tracking the Flow of Federal Funding for Children and Youth An interactive chart that illustrates how federal funds flow through agencies and into communities
Insights November 11, 2024 After-School Programs Offer an Antidote to Social Media Harms. Big Tech Settlements Should Foot the Bill.
News November 6, 2024 Voters in Local Communities Approve Up to $133 Million for Kids in the 2024 Election
News October 30, 2024 Multnomah County’s Preschool for All Shows Communities How to Expand Preschool Access and Still Preserve Infant and Toddler Child Care