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Rural Development Strategies: Federal Funds and Development Policy: Tables

These data and more are available in the ERS Federal Funds data product.

Table 1

Per capita Federal funding by region, metro status, and program function, fiscal 2010
Area1 All
Federal
funds
Agriculture
and natural
resources
Community
resources
Defense
and space
Human
resources
Income
security
National
functions
  Dollars per person
United States 10,864 90 1,421 1,628 193 5,857 1,674
  Metro 10,976 43 1,519 1,779 183 5,636 1,817
  Nonmetro 10,293 331 929 862 245 6,976 950
 
Northeast 11,176 17 1,212 1,283 181 6,964 1,519
  Metro 11,273 12 1,259 1,308 182 6,950 1,562
  Nonmetro 10,278 63 774 1,052 177 7,088 1,123
 
Midwest 9,724 174 1,238 1,049 166 5,762 1,335
  Metro 9,773 58 1,347 1,145 158 5,566 1,499
  Nonmetro 9,562 554 881 735 192 6,402 798
 
South 11,714 90 1,402 2,137 201 5,912 1,972
  Metro 11,994 50 1,548 2,450 185 5,497 2,264
  Nonmetro 10,570 252 806 864 265 7,603 780
 
West 10,328 70 1,784 1,617 216 5,008 1,634
  Metro 10,251 43 1,814 1,689 201 4,874 1,630
  Nonmetro 11,008 299 1,517 988 346 6,188 1,670
Note: Individual figures may not sum to total because of rounding.
1/ This table uses the 2003 definition of metropolitan areas to distinguish between metro and nonmetro counties. See definitions used in the tables and charts for explanation of county types, regions, and program functions.
Source: Calculated by ERS using Federal funds data from the Census Bureau.

Table 2

Per capita Federal funds by function and county type, fiscal 2010
Area1 All
Federal
funds
Agriculture
and natural
resources
Community
resources
Defense
and space
Human
resources
Income
security
National
functions
  Dollars per person
United States 10,864 90 1,421 1,628 193 5,857 1,674
  Metro 10,976 43 1,519 1,779 183 5,636 1,817
  Nonmetro 10,293 331 929 862 245 6,976 950
Nonmetro counties by degree of urbanization: 1
Urbanized 10,334 177 1,021 1,336 215 6,496 1,089
Less urbanized 10,010 345 862 459 258 7,208 878
Totally rural 11,437 895 860 802 308 7,853 718
Nonmetro counties by economc type: 2
Farming-dependent 10,729 1,735 885 340 304 6,782 683
Mining-dependent 10,406 209 1,028 258 297 7,665 948
Manufacturing-dependent 9,200 217 809 449 196 6,860 668
Federal-State-dep. 13,880 194 1,175 3,695 328 6,480 2,007
Services-dependent 9,415 95 1,094 519 153 6,535 1,020
Nonspecialized 10,253 350 908 424 281 7,427 863
Nonmetro counties by policy type: 2
Persistent poverty 12,029 461 784 493 533 8,777 981
Retirement-destination 9,925 76 1,032 736 204 7,067 810
Housing stress 10,558 324 1,117 711 378 6,694 1,334
Low education 10,589 391 700 345 358 8,044 751
Low employment 11,716 268 757 610 428 8,713 940
Population loss 11,644 901 742 681 279 8,005 1,035
Recreation 9,867 115 1,180 671 235 6,638 1,027
Note: Individual figures may not sum to total because of rounding.
1/ This table uses the 2003 definition of metropolitan areas to distinguish between metro and nonmetro counties. Urbanized = at least 20,000 urban population in 2003; less urbanized = 2,500 to 19,999 urban population; totally rural = less than 2,500 urban.
2/ See definitions used in the table and charts for explanations of county types and program functions.
Source: Calculated by ERS using Federal funds data from the Census Bureau.

Table 3

Per capita Federal funds by type of payment and county type, fiscal 2010
Area1 All
Federal
funds
Grants Direct
loans
Guaran-
teed
loans
Retire-
ment /
disability
payments
Other
direct
pymts.
for individs.
Direct
payments
not for
individs.
Procure-
ment
contracts
Salaries
and
wages
  Dollars per person
United States 10,864 1,592 281 1,294 2,923 1,975 104 1,602 1,094
  Metro 10,976 1,554 280 1,403 2,805 1,936 70 1,783 1,147
  Nonmetro 10,293 1,783 285 745 3,520 2,171 279 686 825
Nonmetro counties by degree of urbanization: 1
Urbanized 10,334 1,514 327 895 3,466 2,003 146 860 1,124
Less urbanized 10,010 1,922 251 652 3,519 2,259 292 541 575
Totally rural 11,437 2,238 269 562 3,742 2,448 756 649 772
Nonmetro counties by economic type: 2
Farming-dep. 10,729 1,992 411 651 3,108 2,258 1,399 319 592
Mining-dep. 10,406 1,977 275 773 3,639 2,551 161 596 433
Manufacturing-dep. 9,200 1,588 234 671 3,480 2,175 172 441 439
Federal-State-dep. 13,880 2,097 429 939 3,294 1,894 200 2,108 2,918
Services-dep. 9,415 1,212 203 935 3,870 1,851 107 697 540
Nonspecialized 10,253 2,004 286 704 3,622 2,323 296 444 574
Nonmetro counties by policy type: 2
Persistent poverty 12,029 3,395 405 467 3,394 2,866 377 501 624
Retirement Destination 9,925 1,398 141 864 4,093 1,929 96 682 723
Housing stress 10,558 2,232 392 840 3,234 1,991 269 784 816
Low education 10,589 2,555 264 491 3,399 2,655 302 423 501
Low employment 11,716 2,795 284 486 3,851 2,739 233 576 752
Population loss 11,644 2,122 469 547 3,750 2,706 713 579 758
Recreation 9,867 1,583 194 923 3,775 1,791 136 726 737
Note: Individual figures may not sum to total because of rounding.
1/ This table uses the 2003 definition of metropolitan areas to distinguish between metro and nonmetro counties.Urbanized = at least 20,000 urban population in 2003; less urbanized = 2,500 to 19,999 urban population; totally rural = less than 2,500 urban population.
2/ See definitions used in the table and charts for explanations of county types and program functions.
Source: Calculated by ERS using Federal funds data from the Census Bureau.

Definitions

The 2004 ERS County Typology is a classification system that was developed to group counties by economic and policy-relevant characteristics. The County Typology used here are those described in 2004 County Typology Codes.

County economic types—(mutually exclusive; a county may fall into only one economic type): Farming-dependent, Manufacturing-dependent, Mining-dependent, Federal/State government-dependent, Services-dependent, and Non-specialized.

County policy types—(overlapping; a county may fall into any number of these types): Housing stress, Low-education, Low-employment, Persistent poverty, Population loss, Nonmetro recreation, and Retirement destination.


Census regions—We use the Census-defined regions as follows:

Northeast: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont.

Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.

South: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia.

West: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.

In most cases, we use only the nonmetro portion of these regions when referring to county-level data variations.


Metro areas—Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), as defined by the Office of Management and Budget, include central counties containing one or more urbanized areas (urban nucleus with 50,000 or more population); outlying counties are included if economically tied to the core counties as measured by work commuting.

Nonmetro areas—These are counties outside metro area boundaries. "Rural" and "nonmetro" are used interchangeably to refer to people and places outside of MSAs. For more details on metro and nonmetro definitions, see What is Rural.

Rural-urban continuum county codes—A Classification system developed by ERS to group counties by the size of their urban population and the adjacency to metropolitan areas. Urbanized, less urbanized, and totally rural nonmetro counties fall under this classification. For more details see Rural-Urban Continuum Codes.


Census Program Object Classifications

Salaries and Wages
Procurement Contracts
Direct Payments for Individuals (retirement and disability only)
Direct Payments for Individuals (other than retirement and disability)
Direct Payments Other than for Individuals
Grants (block grants, formula grants, project grants, and cooperative agreements)
Direct Loans
Guaranteed/Insured Loans
Insurance (this category is usually excluded from ERS analysis)

ERS Program Function Classifications:

ERS's six broad function categories for Federal programs are as follows:

Agriculture and natural resources: agricultural assistance, agricultural research and services, forest and land management, water and recreation resources;

Community resources: business assistance, community facilities, community and regional development, environmental protection, housing, native American programs, and transportation;

Defense and space: aeronautics and space, defense contracts, defense payroll and administration;

Human resources: elementary and secondary education, food and nutrition, health services, social services, training and employment;

Income security: medical and hospital benefits, public assistance and unemployment compensation, retirement and disability--includes Social Security; and

National functions: criminal justice and law enforcement, energy, higher education and research, and all other programs, excluding insurance.


Budgetary Terms

Budget authority—The authority becoming available during the year to enter into obligations that will result in immediate or future outlays of Government funds. In some cases, budget authority can be carried over to following years. It can take the form of appropriations, which permit obligations to be incurred and payments to be made, or authority to borrow, or authority to contract in advance of separate appropriations. Supplemental appropriations provide budget authority when the need for funds is too urgent to be postponed until the next annual appropriations act.

Obligations incurred—Once budget authority is enacted, Government agencies may incur obligations to make payments. These include current liabilities for salaries, wages, and interests; contracts for purchase of supplies and equipment, construction, and the acquisition of office space, buildings, and land. In our tables and charts, when reporting obligations for credit programs, we report the total value of the loans obligated or guaranteed.

Outlays—This is the measure of Government spending. Outlays are payments to liquidate obligations (other than repayment of debt), net of refunds and offsetting collections.

Direct loan—This is the disbursement of funds by the Government to a non-Federal borrower under a contract that requires repayment, with or without interest.

Loan guarantee—This is any guarantee, insurance, or other pledge with respect to the payment of all or a part of the principal or interest on any debt obligation of a non-Federal borrower to a non-Federal lender.

Fiscal year—A fiscal year is the U.S. Government's accounting period. It begins October 1 and ends September 30, and is designated by the calendar year in which it ends.

 

For more information, contact: Richard Reeder

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: December 2, 2011