MoreRSS

site iconVisual CapitalistModify

By highlighting the bigger picture through data-driven visuals, we stay true to our mission to help cut through the clutter and simplify a complex world.
Please copy the RSS to your reader, or quickly subscribe to:

Inoreader Feedly Follow Feedbin Local Reader

Rss preview of Blog of Visual Capitalist

Mapped: U.S. Job Losses by State in 2025

2025-11-25 21:11:05

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Map showing job losses by state in 2025 as of October 2025.

Use This Visualization

Mapped: Job Losses by U.S. State in 2025

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Washington, D.C. is home to more than a quarter of the nation’s job losses in 2025, reaching 303,778 as of October.
  • California accounts for 14% of U.S. layoffs, particularly in the tech and manufacturing sectors.

U.S. job weakness is disproportionately affecting certain states, as trade policy, immigration, and AI shapes the labor market.

So far, job losses in Washington, D.C. account for the largest share of the national total by far. California follows next in line, as Big Tech firms shed thousands of workers after a pandemic-era hiring spree.

This graphic shows job cuts by U.S. state in 2025, based on data from Challenger, Gray and Christmas.

U.S. Job Losses Hit 1.1 Million

This year, U.S. job losses have reached 1.1 million as of October, up sharply from last year’s total of 761,000.

State Job Losses YTD 2025 Change vs YTD 2024
Washington 303,778 773%
California 158,734 16%
New York 81,701 20%
Georgia 78,049 338%
Washington 77,658 111%
New Jersey 64,334 454%
Texas 46,352 -31%
Ohio 40,707 70%
Florida 22,771 76%
Illinois 20,678 3%
Michigan 19,336 -10%
Arizona 18,547 103%
Pennsylvania 17,256 12%
Massachusetts 14,430 -18%
Tennessee 11,566 -27%
North Carolina 10,720 26%
Maryland 9,480 27%
Virginia 9,304 32%
Alabama 9,115 180%
Minnesota 9,049 4%
Iowa 7,318 -8%
Maine 7,311 1,446%
Colorado 6,982 -50%
Missouri 5,519 -21%
Kentucky 5,277 52%
Nebraska 5,249 597%
Oregon 4,660 -54%
Wisconsin 3,511 -63%
Connecticut 3,251 -66%
South Carolina 3,136 -28%
Kansas 3,095 -36%
Nevada 2,668 -76%
Indiana 2,120 -45%
Oklahoma 2,061 124%
Louisiana 2,050 57%
Mississippi 2,006 95%
Alaska 1,712 2,346%
Utah 1,472 -75%
Rhode Island 1,221 -90%
Hawaii 1,063 -65%
West Virginia 989 1%
Arkansas 620 -63%
Idaho 531 -26%
South Dakota 478 -57%
Montana 461 -55%
Vermont 399 -15%
New Mexico 288 -68%
Delaware 209 -70%
New Hampshire 154 -35%
North Dakota 96 3%
Wyoming 28 -99%

As we can see, federal workforce overhauls have resulted in 303,778 layoffs in Washington, D.C., more than California and New York combined.

In California, job losses now total 158,734, reflecting a softening labor market. Overall, California is home to 18 million workers, the highest share in the country.

Across the broader U.S. tech sector, layoff announcements now total 141,159 compared with 120,470 this time last year. Notably, Intel plans to cut 5,000 workers in the U.S., mainly in California and Oregon. San Francisco-based Salesforce also plans to slash 4,000 workers this year.

Meanwhile, New York firms have cut 81,700 workers, a 20% increase from last year. New York-based Verizon alone announced cuts of 13,000 workers in November, largely affecting its U.S. employees.

By contrast, layoff data in Texas is significantly better in 2025 compared to a year ago. Not only that, it leads nationally in job creation, seeing some of the strongest growth in the services and hospitality sectors.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on unemployment by state.

Charted: Home and Rent Price Changes in Global Cities (2015-2025)

2025-11-25 02:44:51

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

chart of real home price and rent price changes in major global cities from 2015 to 2025

Use This Visualization

Charted: Home and Rent Price Changes in Global Cities (2015-2025)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Miami leads all cities with 93.1% growth in real home prices over the last decade, far exceeding its rent increase of 12.7%.
  • Madrid’s rents jumped 48%, the largest rental rise globally, driven by surging tourism and short-term rental demand, while its home prices climbed about 42%.
  • Most cities saw property values outpace rental price growth, but some major cities like New York, Milan, London, and Hong Kong saw declines in both.

From 2015 to 2025, global real estate markets experienced significant divergence between real home price growth and rent price growth.

While most major cities saw home values rise faster than rents, a few key markets—particularly in Europe and Asia—showed softening property prices amid slowing demand and tighter credit conditions.

This visualization highlights 25 major global cities from the UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index 2025, comparing inflation-adjusted percentage changes in both home and rental prices over the past decade.

Miami Leads Global Home Price Growth Since 2015

Miami topped the list with a staggering 93.1% increase in real home prices, showing the strongest decade-long appreciation globally.

Despite this, rent prices grew only 12.7%, reflecting a widening affordability gap.

The data table below shows the real home price change and real rent price change across 25 major cities around the world.

City Real home price change (2015-2025) Real rental price change (2015-2025)
🇺🇸 Miami, United States 93.1% 12.7%
🇯🇵 Tokyo, Japan 66.0% 23.1%
🇳🇱 Amsterdam, Netherlands 64.4% 17.2%
🇨🇦 Toronto, Canada 48.0% 8.3%
🇪🇸 Madrid, Spain 42.4% 48.0%
🇨🇭 Zurich, Switzerland 42.4% 23.1%
🇩🇪 Frankfurt, Germany 42.4% 14.9%
🇺🇸 Los Angeles, United States 42.4% -2.0%
🇨🇦 Vancouver, Canada 39.7% 21.9%
🇩🇪 Munich, Germany 30.5% 18.4%
🇸🇬 Singapore 25.5% 21.9%
🇨🇭 Geneva, Switzerland 17.2% 1.0%
🇦🇺 Sydney, Australia 16.1% 17.2%
🇦🇪 Dubai, UAE 12.7% 2.0%
🇺🇸 San Francisco, United States 7.2% -19.1%
🇫🇷 Paris, France 0.0% -8.6%
🇮🇹 Milan, Italy -4.9% -3.0%
🇺🇸 New York, United States -4.9% -7.7%
🇬🇧 London, United Kingdom -10.5% -10.5%
🇧🇷 São Paulo, Brazil -19.1% -3.0%
🇭🇰 Hong Kong -19.9% -11.4%

Similar trends occurred in other North American cities: Toronto’s home prices rose 48%, while rents climbed a modest 8.3%, and Vancouver saw a 39.7% jump in property values compared to 21.9% rent growth.

These disparities underscore how ownership demand in North America—fueled by migration, investment, and limited supply—has far outpaced rental market fundamentals.

New York City was an outlier, with declines in both home and rent prices of 4.9% and 7.7% respectively.

Europe’s Home and Rent Price Changes Vary

Europe’s housing performance was varied, with Madrid being an outlier with significant increases especially in rent prices.

Madrid saw home prices rise by 42.4%, while rents surged 48%, the steepest rental increase among all major global cities. This reflects Spain’s booming short-term rental sector and tourism rebound.

In contrast, London’s property and rent prices have fallen 10.5% since 2015, potentially reflecting Brexit’s lingering effects and the significant millionaire exodus the country faces.

Milan was another city which saw declines in both metrics, with a 4.9% and 3% fall in property and rental prices.

Meanwhile, Zurich and Munich both saw double-digit home price increases of 42.4% and 30.5%, with rent gains also in the double digits at 23.1% and 18.4%, respectively.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about rent prices around the world, check out this graphic which shows the global cities with the highest rent prices on the Voronoi app.

The World’s Biggest Cryptocurrencies in 2025

2025-11-24 23:33:01

See more visuals like this on the Voronoi app.

Map showing the world’s biggest cryptocurrencies in 2025 by market cap.

Use This Visualization

The World’s Biggest Cryptocurrencies in 2025

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin remains the world’s largest cryptocurrency, nearing a $2 trillion market cap in 2025.
  • Stablecoins like Tether and USDC now occupy significant positions in the market.

The global cryptocurrency market cap stands at almost $3 trillion. This visualization ranks the world’s biggest cryptocurrencies in 2025, showing how value is distributed across major networks, stablecoins, and emerging digital assets.

The data for this visualization comes from CoinMarketCap. It represents the latest market capitalization figures for the largest cryptocurrencies as of November 11, 2025. Market cap is calculated by multiplying a token’s price by its circulating supply.

Bitcoin and Ethereum Continue to Dominate

Bitcoin remains the clear market leader at nearly $2 trillion, reflecting its status as the most widely held and institutionally recognized crypto asset. Ethereum follows at $391 billion, supported by its role as the leading smart contract platform. Together, the two represent the core of the crypto landscape.

Rank Name Market Cap
1 Bitcoin $1,997,165,600,925
2 Ethereum $391,239,568,163
3 Tether $183,930,453,416
4 XRP $140,020,028,628
5 BNB $127,574,296,502
6 Solana $80,406,801,155
7 USDC $75,575,532,783
8 TRON $27,726,199,749
9 Dogecoin $24,884,478,723
10 Cardano $19,037,021,093
11 Hyperliquid $13,036,113,804
12 Chainlink $10,165,780,197
13 Bitcoin Cash $10,119,032,710
14 Stellar $8,659,896,374
15 UNUS SED LEO $8,443,694,797
16 Zcash $8,201,255,752
17 Ethena USD $8,195,997,122
18 Litecoin $7,428,846,643
19 Monero $7,161,607,062
20 Hedera $7,014,544,404
21 Avalanche $6,960,020,607
22 Sui $6,907,821,704
23 Shiba Inu $5,500,679,553
24 Dai $5,364,314,220
25 Toncoin $4,940,611,045
26 Uniswap $4,886,752,988
27 Polkadot $4,681,240,652
28 Cronos $4,400,321,655
29 Mantle $3,977,642,836
30 Canton $3,940,854,545
31 World Liberty Financial $3,586,042,424
32 Bittensor $3,514,471,572
33 PayPal USD $3,416,282,717
34 Internet Computer $3,189,227,358
35 NEAR Protocol $3,151,910,974
36 Aave $3,043,905,646
37 World Liberty Financial USD $2,819,404,867
38 Bitget Token $2,787,410,634
39 MemeCore $2,509,460,029
40 OKB $2,464,330,852
41 Ethereum Classic $2,327,032,820
42 Pepe $2,294,432,168
43 Aptos $2,187,451,666
44 Ethena $2,177,400,156
45 Aster $2,174,151,441
46 Ondo $1,944,426,626
47 Pi $1,829,238,754
48 Polygon $1,753,982,749
49 Worldcoin $1,699,117,284
50 KuCoin Token $1,620,080,843

Other top cryptocurrencies in our list include layer-1 networks such as Solana, BNB, and Cardano.

The Rise of Stablecoins and Alternative Layer-1 Networks

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies designed to maintain a steady value, typically by pegging to fiat currencies, commodities, or other financial instruments. They serve as a bridge between traditional finance and digital markets, offering price stability that makes them useful for trading, payments, and storing value on-chain.

Stablecoins like Tether and USDC now occupy significant positions in the market, with market capitalization of $184 billion and $76 billion.

Their rapid growth reflects rising demand for reliable, dollar-pegged assets across exchanges, payment networks, and decentralized finance applications.

Emerging Assets and New Entrants

Beyond the major players, a range of mid-size tokens have gained traction.

Projects like Hyperliquid, Chainlink, and Hedera highlight strong demand for specialized tools such as oracle data, liquidity infrastructure, and enterprise-grade networks. Meme-driven and community-led tokens, including Dogecoin, Shiba Inu, and Pepe, remain notable for their cultural influence despite more volatile fundamentals.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Inflation Watch: Countries Losing the Most Purchasing Power in 2025 on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Mapped: The Income Needed to Join the Top 1% in Every State

2025-11-24 21:06:04

See more visuals like this on the Voronoi app.

Map showing how much income it takes to join the top 1% in every U.S. state, from over $1M in Connecticut to $416K in West Virginia.

Use This Visualization

Mapped: Income Needed to Join the Top 1% by State (2025)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Coastal economies, particularly in the Northeast and on the West Coast, dominate the upper half of the ranking.
  • Connecticut leads the nation, where you’d need to earn more than $1.05 million to join the top 1% by income.

What it takes to join the top 1% of earners varies across the United States. This map highlights the income floor required to enter the wealthiest bracket in each state for 2025. The spread is wide, stretching from over $1 million at the top to barely $400,000 in less wealthy states.

High-paying industries like finance, technology, and professional services cluster in coastal states, pushing top incomes even higher. Meanwhile, states with smaller economies and lower costs of living require far less to reach the elite group.

The data for this visualization comes from SmartAsset. It ranks all 50 states by the annual income required to enter the top 1%, based on tax return data. The table below also includes the number of households in this bracket and the corresponding income floor for the top 5%.

Where You Need the Most to Join the 1%

Connecticut tops the list with a $1,056,996 income floor, making it the only state above the $1 million mark.

Rank State Top 1% of earners # of top 1% returns Top 5% of earners
1 Connecticut $1,056,996 16,917 $362,263
2 Massachusetts $965,170 32,795 $378,434
3 California $905,396 175,045 $353,073
4 New Jersey $901,082 43,042 $367,108
5 New York $891,640 91,840 $307,753
6 Florida $859,381 105,101 $281,811
7 Washington $819,101 35,597 $355,767
8 Colorado $772,989 27,685 $318,659
9 Wyoming $771,369 2,611 $255,320
10 Texas $743,955 128,130 $284,661
11 New Hampshire $735,374 6,796 $311,145
12 Illinois $731,202 56,794 $292,729
13 Nevada $703,713 14,754 $248,739
14 Virginia $701,792 39,103 $314,694
15 North Dakota $695,759 3,431 $272,755
16 Utah $690,548 13,991 $270,645
17 South Dakota $687,190 4,062 $255,851
18 Maryland $677,543 29,040 $304,250
19 Minnesota $671,408 26,423 $285,607
20 Georgia $662,821 46,220 $267,958
21 Montana $656,830 5,101 $251,774
22 Pennsylvania $655,636 58,541 $272,141
23 Arizona $641,262 31,872 $261,362
24 North Carolina $640,783 46,525 $268,730
25 Tennessee $638,299 30,531 $247,765
26 Idaho $627,839 8,145 $249,451
27 Kansas $609,946 12,643 $253,834
28 Nebraska $603,899 8,660 $251,139
29 Rhode Island $603,162 5,224 $258,276
30 Oregon $603,006 19,053 $270,877
31 Alaska $586,381 3,223 $266,499
32 Vermont $583,559 3,123 $249,931
33 South Carolina $580,600 23,203 $241,531
34 Delaware $578,580 4,726 $260,787
35 Wisconsin $566,711 27,293 $242,066
36 Michigan $561,582 45,218 $241,403
37 Hawaii $561,147 6,472 $249,850
38 Missouri $559,043 26,898 $237,461
39 Iowa $554,046 13,821 $241,591
40 Louisiana $551,125 18,593 $225,674
41 Maine $550,936 6,618 $236,338
42 Ohio $550,724 53,103 $232,196
43 Oklahoma $544,679 16,106 $224,074
44 Alabama $532,600 20,185 $226,634
45 Indiana $531,332 30,120 $227,098
46 Arkansas $517,761 12,198 $217,087
47 Kentucky $496,281 18,395 $215,196
48 New Mexico $451,639 9,310 $211,101
49 Mississippi $439,479 11,731 $195,171
50 West Virginia $416,310 7,316 $196,335

Massachusetts ($965,170) and California ($905,396) follow in second and third place, both supported by large, high-skill job markets. States in the Northeast and along the West Coast dominate the top positions due to dense economic activity and elevated earnings in specialized industries.

Middle-Tier States Still Require High Earnings

States like Colorado, Washington, and Virginia sit in the upper-middle tier, requiring between $700,000 and $820,000 to qualify for the top 1%. These states benefit from fast-growing metropolitan areas, strong tech or government-driven employment, and rising household incomes.

Even in energy-focused states such as Wyoming and North Dakota, the income floors exceed $690,000, showing how pockets of high-paying industries influence overall thresholds.

The Most Affordable States for Top 1% Status

At the bottom of the ranking, West Virginia’s $416,310 threshold is the lowest in the country, followed by Mississippi ($439,479) and New Mexico ($451,639). Lower costs of living, smaller urban job markets, and fewer high-paying industry clusters contribute to these more modest thresholds.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Visualizing the Cost of the American Dream on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Mapped: America’s Most (and Least) Affordable Cities in 2025

2025-11-24 03:13:56

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Use This Visualization

The Most (and Least) Affordable U.S. Cities in 2025

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • In Tupelo, MS living costs are more than a fifth cheaper than the national average as of Q2 2025.
  • Manhattan, NY is the most unaffordable, while Brooklyn and Queens also rank in the top 10.

Today, Tupelo, MS is the nation’s most affordable city, where your dollar can stretch 21% further than the U.S. average.

Similarly, several Southern cities have the lowest cost of living in the country, typically seeing smaller populations and more affordable housing. In contrast, New York and California continue to rank among the most expensive places to live.

This graphic shows the U.S. cities with the lowest and highest cost of living, based on data from the Council for Community and Economic Research.

Where Are America’s Affordable Cities?

Below, we rank cities by their cost of living index, which measured 61 items in Q2 2025:

Most Affordable Urban Areas Cost of Living Index Least Affordable Urban Areas Cost of Living Index
1 Tupelo MS 79 1 Manhattan NY 232
2 Decatur IL 79 2 Honolulu HI 182
3 Harlingen TX 80 3 San Jose CA 181
4 McAllen TX 80 4 Orange County CA 162
5 Richmond IN 81 5 San Francisco CA 160
6 Oklahoma City OK 82 6 Brooklyn NY 159
7 Pittsburg KS 82 7 Queens NY 151
8 Salina KS 82 8 Los Angeles-
Long Beach CA
149
9 Muskogee OK 83 9 San Diego CA 146
10 Ponca City OK 83 10 Boston MA 145

Oklahoma stands out for affordability, with three of the nation’s 10 most affordable cities. Texas and Kansas follow closely, each with two.

In Oklahoma City, the median home sale price sits at $225,167, and more than half of homes sold in August went for less than the list price. Down south, McAllen, Texas saw the third-lowest grocery costs in the country.

At the other end of the spectrum, living costs in Manhattan are more than twice the national average—72% higher than even San Francisco. Neighboring boroughs like Brooklyn and Queens also rank among the least affordable in the U.S., driven by an influx of Manhattan buyers during the pandemic.

Honolulu, meanwhile, takes the lead for grocery expenses, with prices more than 32% above the U.S. average, and 13% higher than in Manhattan.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the world’s most expensive real estate markets.

Ranked: The Countries That Gained the Most Forest (2015-2025)

2025-11-24 01:51:46

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Use This Visualization

The Countries That Gained the Most Forest (2015-2025)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • China, Russia, and India are global leaders in forest area growth in the past 10 years.
  • Vietnam ranks in tenth, with 72,800 hectares of net forest gains.

Forests absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen, acting as the world’s lungs.

At the same time, forests contain distinct weather systems and water flows, impacting land areas thousands of miles away. While millions of hectares (ha) have been lost across the Amazon over the past several decades, several countries are actively pursuing reforestation efforts.

This graphic shows the top countries by growth in forest area since 2015, based on data from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.

Forest Area Growth by Country (2015-2025)

Below, we show how China has gained the most net forest area in the world over the last decade:

Ranking Country Net gain 2015-2025
(ha)
Average annual net change
(%)
1 🇨🇳 China 1,686,000 0.8
2 🇷🇺 Russia 942,000 0.1
3 🇮🇳 India 191,000 0.3
4 🇹🇷 Türkiye 118,000 0.5
5 🇦🇺 Australia 105,000 0.1
6 🇫🇷 France 95,900 0.6
7 🇮🇩 Indonesia 94,100 0.1
8 🇿🇦 South Africa 87,600 0.4
9 🇨🇦 Canada 82,500 0.0
10 🇻🇳 Vietnam 72,800 0.5

Since the 1970s, China has planted thousands, if not millions, of trees under its “Great Green Wall” initiative.

This initiative is designed to prevent sand in the Gobi and Taklamakan deserts from encroaching into cities. Aimed to be completed by 2050, the project has had mixed results, including low tree survival rates in some cases. Yet in spite of this, 1.7 million net ha of forests have been planted in the country since 2015.

Russia ranks in second globally, with 942,000 ha gained over the decade. Supporting this trend are national policies aimed at accelerating forest area growth beginning in 2018.

Similarly, India has enacted ambitious national policy goals for reforestation. By 2030, it plans to restore 26 million ha of forest as part of its climate goals. Since 2015, it has seen a net gain of 191,000 hectares of forest, the third-highest globally.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the countries with the largest forests.