Politics & Government
Delaware received âFâ for fiscal health
According to Truth in Accounting's new Financial State of the States report

A new report on the financial condition of the 50 states ranked Delaware no. 45 for its fiscal health in fiscal year 2020. The report found that the majority of the states were ill-prepared for any crisis and that despite federal aid, state debt worsened during the onset of the pandemic.
The analysis by Truth in Accounting, a non-profit government finance watchdog group, found Delaware needed $10.4 billion to pay all of its bills, or $31,300 from each of its taxpayers.
According to the watchdog's twelfth annual Financial State of the States report, Delaware had $15.3 billion in bills and only $4.9 billion in available assets to pay those bills after capital and restricted assets were excluded. This resulted in a $10.4 billion shortfall, or a $31,300 Taxpayer Burden, which is each taxpayer's share of the state debt after the stateâs available assets have been tapped. TIA's Taxpayer Burden indicator incorporates both assets and liabilities, including unfunded retirement obligations.
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Delaware was not alone; total debt among the 50 states amounted to $1.5 trillion at the end of the fiscal year 2020. The average Taxpayer Burden across the 50 states was $9,300 for fiscal year 2020, which is $2,000 worse than the prior year. Only 11 states had a Taxpayer Surplus for 2020.
The bottom line is that Delaware did not have enough money to pay its bills, which is why it received a "F" grade for its fiscal health.