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

Ranked: Homeownership Rates by U.S. Occupation

2026-04-30 22:36:17

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Bar chart showing homeownership rates by occupation in 2024 in the U.S.

Use This Visualization

Ranked: Homeownership Rates Across Major U.S. Occupations

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

  • High-paying jobs don’t always translate into higher homeownership.
  • Several mid-income professions match or exceed ownership levels of top earners.
  • After a certain income level, homeownership rates converge across occupations.

Does earning more money actually make it easier to own a home?

Across U.S. occupations, the answer isn’t as straightforward as it seems. While high-income roles like management and STEM lead in pay, their homeownership rates are often matched by mid-income professions such as education and social services.

Using data from the National Association of Realtors and the U.S. Census Bureau, this graphic ranks homeownership rates by occupation in 2024, revealing how factors beyond salary—like job stability and geographic distribution—shape who owns a home.

A clear pattern emerges: once incomes pass a moderate threshold, homeownership rates begin to level out across very different occupations.

Which Jobs Have High Homeownership Rates?

Management and business roles stand at 72%, reflecting both higher incomes and stability. But just below them, a surprising group of professions clusters tightly together.

STEM professionals and education workers have nearly identical homeownership rates (both 67%)—despite a massive gap in pay. In fact, STEM workers earn over $100K on average, while education workers make roughly $65K.

Here’s how homeownership varies across major occupations:

Occupation Homeownership Rate 2024 Median Salary
Management & Business 72.2% $91,398
Education & Social Services 67.3% $65,147
STEM / Technical 67.2% $102,450
Sales & Real Estate 63.3% $50,967
Healthcare 62.2% $82,134
Skilled Trades & Construction 62.0% $54,777
Transportation & Public Safety 58.1% $46,975
Service Occupations 45.5% $38,936

Why do lower-paid professions keep pace? Occupations like education, healthcare, and public services often offer more stable employment, predictable income, and access to benefits—factors that can make long-term financial planning, including homeownership, more achievable.

Healthcare and skilled trades (both 62%) show relatively strong ownership, reinforcing the role of stable, in-demand work. Sales and real estate workers (63%) also sit in this middle band, reinforcing how a wide range of incomes converge at similar ownership levels.

At the lower end, transportation and public safety workers (58%) and service occupations (46%) lag behind, highlighting barriers faced by lower-income and less stable roles in accessing housing.

The biggest takeaway: beyond a certain income level, what you earn matters less than how stable and predictable that income is. That helps explain why professions with very different salaries end up with nearly identical homeownership rates.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

For more, explore this graphic on the average salaries by state in 2025.

Mapped: The Top Export in Every U.S. State (2025)

2026-04-30 19:52:34

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Map showing the top goods export by U.S. state in 2025.

Use This Visualization

Mapped: The Top Export in Every U.S. 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

  • Aircraft is the top export in 13 states—the most of any category.
  • Tech leads the West, while energy dominates much of the South.
  • Pharmaceuticals are the top export in six states, concentrated in the Northeast and Midwest.

America’s $2.1 trillion export economy isn’t powered by a single industry—it’s a patchwork of 50 specialized engines.

This map shows the top international goods export for every U.S. state, based on data from the U.S. International Trade Administration. From aircraft in Washington to oil and gas in Texas, each state specializes in a different piece of the global economy.

Notably, over half of U.S. states are tied to strategic sectors like aerospace, semiconductors, and energy—industries increasingly shaped by geopolitical tensions and supply chain shifts.

The Industries Driving U.S. Exports by State

Aircraft is the most widespread top export, leading in 13 states across the country.

Aerospace and defense is the only U.S. manufacturing sector with a net trade surplus, fueling almost $1 trillion in economic activity annually. In states like Washington and Florida, it ranks as the largest export category overall.

Below is a state-by-state breakdown of the top export category in 2025, based on NAICS-4 classifications:

State Top Export 2025 Category
Arkansas Aircraft Transportation
Connecticut Aircraft Transportation
Florida Aircraft Transportation
Georgia Aircraft Transportation
Hawaii Aircraft Transportation
Kansas Aircraft Transportation
Kentucky Aircraft Transportation
Maine Aircraft Transportation
Maryland Aircraft Transportation
New Hampshire Aircraft Transportation
Ohio Aircraft Transportation
Oklahoma Aircraft Transportation
Washington Aircraft Transportation
Delaware Medicine Medical
Illinois Medicine Medical
Indiana Medicine Medical
Massachusetts Medicine Medical
North Carolina Medicine Medical
Pennsylvania Medicine Medical
Rhode Island Medicine Medical
Alabama Vehicles Transportation
Michigan Vehicles Transportation
Missouri Vehicles Transportation
South Carolina Vehicles Transportation
West Virginia Vehicles Transportation
Nevada Primary Metals Industrial
New Jersey Primary Metals Industrial
New York Primary Metals Industrial
Utah Primary Metals Industrial
Idaho Semiconductors Tech
New Mexico Semiconductors Tech
Oregon Semiconductors Tech
Vermont Semiconductors Tech
Arizona IT Hardware Tech
California IT Hardware Tech
Wisconsin IT Hardware Tech
Mississippi Refining Energy
North Dakota Refining Energy
Virginia Refining Energy
South Dakota Chemicals Industrial
Wyoming Chemicals Industrial
Louisiana Oil & Gas Energy
Texas Oil & Gas Energy
Colorado Meatpacking Agriculture
Nebraska Meatpacking Agriculture
Minnesota Medical Devices Medical
Tennessee Medical Devices Medical
Montana Cattle Agriculture
Alaska Fishing Agriculture
Iowa Machinery Industrial

Semiconductors and Tech Anchor the West

Semiconductors dominate exports across parts of the West, including New Mexico and Oregon—highlighting the growing importance of domestic chip manufacturing. Semiconductors made up 46% of New Mexico’s exports, totaling $7 billion in 2025. In Oregon, they were valued at more than $9 billion.

In California and Arizona, IT hardware and computer equipment are leading exports, reinforcing the region’s central role in global tech supply chains.

These states are increasingly critical to U.S. efforts to reduce reliance on foreign chip production, especially amid rising competition with China.

Biotech and Pharmaceuticals Power the Northeast and Midwest

Pharmaceuticals are the top export in six states, driven by dense R&D ecosystems in the Northeast and Midwest.

Massachusetts alone hosts more than 1,000 life sciences companies, making it a global hub for drug development and production. Indiana, meanwhile, is home to Eli Lilly’s global headquarters, with over 13,000 employees in Indianapolis alone.

This concentration of talent, capital, and research institutions continues to fuel high-value medical exports across the region.

America’s Energy Export Powerhouse in the South

The U.S. energy export boom is concentrated in the South, where a tightly integrated network of production, processing, and shipping powers global supply.

Texas anchors the system with $137 billion in oil and gas exports, while Louisiana’s ports and natural gas output connect U.S. energy to global markets. Neighboring Mississippi plays a key role in refining, turning raw inputs into export-ready fuels.

As global energy markets tighten, this regional dominance is becoming more important. In April, U.S. crude and petroleum exports surged to a record 12.9 million barrels per day, driven by conflict in the Middle East.

Why This Matters

From aerospace hubs to semiconductor corridors and energy strongholds, America’s export economy is deeply regional—and increasingly strategic.

As global trade becomes more fragmented and geopolitics reshape supply chains, the industries dominating each state today could play an outsized role in shaping the country’s economic resilience looking ahead.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the share of U.S. exports by state in 2025.

Mapped: Social Media Use Among Europe’s Youth

2026-04-30 12:49:10

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Use This Visualization

Mapped: Where Young Adults Use Social Media Most in Europe

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

  • Social media use among Europe’s young adults is near-universal in many countries, often exceeding 95%.
  • Italy (80.3%) and Germany (84.2%) have the lowest rates on the continent.
  • Northern Europe and the Balkans lead, with several countries approaching full adoption.

Social media use among young adults (aged 16–29) in Europe is nearing saturation, with many countries approaching universal adoption.

But two of Europe’s largest economies stand apart.

Data from Eurostat and Ofcom shows a clear gap. While countries in Northern Europe and the Balkans lead, major economies like Germany (84.2%) and Italy (80.3%) lag behind their peers.

Nearly Universal Adoption With Two Exceptions

In countries like Denmark or Czechia, social media use is close to universal among young adults.

Germany and Italy break from this pattern, highlighting how cultural and structural factors continue to shape digital behavior.

Below is the full ranking of 34 European countries by social media use among young adults:

Rank Country Use of Social Networks in 2025 among young adults
1 🇨🇾 Cyprus 98.3
2 🇲🇰 North Macedonia 97.7
3 🇨🇿 Czechia 97.2
4 🇷🇸 Serbia 97.2
5 🇬🇧 UK 97.0
6 🇩🇰 Denmark 96.9
7 🇫🇮 Finland 96.6
8 🇦🇹 Austria 96.1
9 🇲🇪 Montenegro 96.1
10 🇨🇭 Switzerland 95.8
11 🇳🇴 Norway 95.7
12 🇮🇪 Ireland 94.4
13 🇳🇱 Netherlands 94.2
14 🇫🇷 France 93.9
15 🇱🇻 Latvia 93.8
16 🇹🇷 Turkey 93.4
17 🇷🇴 Romania 92.1
18 🇲🇹 Malta 91.9
19 🇪🇸 Spain 91.6
20 🇵🇹 Portugal 91.6
21 🇪🇪 Estonia 91.4
22 🇭🇺 Hungary 91.1
23 🇸🇮 Slovenia 91.0
24 🇭🇷 Croatia 90.7
25 🇬🇷 Greece 90.6
26 🇵🇱 Poland 90.5
27 🇱🇹 Lithuania 89.8
28 🇧🇬 Bulgaria 89.4
29 🇸🇰 Slovakia 88.7
30 🇸🇪 Sweden 88.4
31 🇧🇪 Belgium 88.3
32 🇱🇺 Luxembourg 84.8
33 🇩🇪 Germany 84.2
34 🇮🇹 Italy 80.3
-- Average 92.4

Cyprus and North Macedonia have the highest rates of young-adult social media use in Europe, followed closely by Czechia, Denmark, Finland, Serbia, and the United Kingdom.

In these countries, social media functions as essential infrastructure, used for everything from coordinating study groups to maintaining social circles. Being offline can make young people effectively invisible in networks that increasingly operate online.

Germany and Italy: The Exceptions

While social media use exceeds 90% across much of Europe, Germany and Italy stand apart.

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has 84.2% of young adults on social media, well below many of its neighbors. Italy is lower still at 80.3%, meaning one in five young adults are not on any social platform, the highest share on the continent.

In Germany, stricter privacy norms shaped by GDPR have contributed to a more cautious approach to online presence. Policymakers are even considering restrictions on youth access, with leaders citing the dangers of online socialization.

In Italy, lower usage may reflect a stronger role for offline social life. Everyday interactions, from evening strolls to time spent in cafes, continue to provide alternatives to digital connection.

Migration’s Relationship With Social Media

High social media use in the Balkans is partly linked to emigration.

Roughly a quarter of Western Balkan citizens, for example, move abroad in search of higher wages and better job opportunities. For families split across different countries or even different continents, social media plays a key role in maintaining communication.

Diaspora has helped social media usage overcome the digital skepticism seen in countries like Germany or Italy.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out the We’re Spending More Time Watching Videos on Social Media on Voronoi.

America Now Spends More on Interest Than Defense

2026-04-30 01:47:57

See more visuals like this on the Voronoi app.

Chart of U.S. net interest payments overtaking defense spending over time since 1996, with projections through to 2036

America Now Spends More on Interest Than Defense

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

  • U.S. interest payments surpassed defense spending in 2024 for the first time in nearly a century.
  • The gap is projected to widen significantly, with interest costs reaching $2.1 trillion by 2036—almost double defense spending.
  • Rising debt and higher rates are making interest the fastest-growing part of the federal budget.

For the first time since the late 1920s, the U.S. is spending more on interest payments than on national defense.

That shift marks a turning point in federal priorities. As debt levels climb and borrowing costs rise, interest payments are taking up a growing share of the budget—projected to hit $2.1 trillion by 2036, far outpacing defense spending.

This chart compares annual U.S. net interest payments and defense outlays from 1996 to 2036, based on data from the White House and projections from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) as of February 2026.

U.S. Interest vs. Defense Spending (1996–2036P)

In 2024, U.S. interest payments reached $879.9 billion, surpassing defense spending of $850.7 billion.

Projections through 2036 show interest payments continuing to pull ahead, even as defense spending rises.

The table below shows how annual U.S. net interest payments and defense spending changed from 1996 to 2025, along with projections from 2026 to 2036:

Year U.S. Annual Net Interest Payments (billions) U.S. Annual Defense Spending (billions)
1996 $241.1 $266.0
1997 $244.0 $271.7
1998 $241.1 $270.2
1999 $229.8 $275.5
2000 $222.9 $295.0
2001 $206.2 $306.1
2002 $170.9 $349.0
2003 $153.1 $404.9
2004 $160.2 $454.1
2005 $184.0 $493.6
2006 $226.6 $520.0
2007 $237.1 $547.9
2008 $252.8 $612.4
2009 $186.9 $656.7
2010 $196.2 $688.9
2011 $230.0 $699.4
2012 $220.4 $670.5
2013 $220.9 $625.8
2014 $229.0 $596.4
2015 $223.2 $583.4
2016 $240.0 $584.8
2017 $262.6 $590.2
2018 $325.0 $622.7
2019 $375.2 $676.4
2020 $345.5 $713.8
2021 $352.3 $741.6
2022 $475.9 $752.1
2023 $658.3 $806.2
2024 $879.9 $850.7
2025 $970.0 $893.0
2026P $1,039.0 $885.0
2027P $1,108.0 $901.0
2028P $1,218.0 $928.0
2029P $1,324.0 $938.0
2030P $1,432.0 $966.0
2031P $1,548.0 $986.0
2032P $1,670.0 $1,006.0
2033P $1,784.0 $1,034.0
2034P $1,904.0 $1,051.0
2035P $2,019.0 $1,068.0
2036P $2,144.0 $1,100.0

How Interest Overtook Defense Spending

Between 1996 and 2001, U.S. defense spending averaged about 30% higher than net interest costs, as falling interest rates and budget surpluses kept debt servicing relatively low.

That gap widened sharply after 9/11. Military spending doubled over the following decade, reaching $699 billion in 2011, while interest costs rose more slowly to $230 billion.

During the low-interest-rate era of the 2010s, borrowing costs stayed low even as federal debt nearly doubled—from $9.0 trillion in 2010 to $16.8 trillion in 2019—masking the long-term cost of that debt.

After COVID-19, that dynamic reversed. A surge in borrowing combined with higher interest rates pushed debt servicing costs sharply higher, with net interest outlays nearly tripling to $970 billion by 2025.

At a projected $1.0 trillion in 2026, America’s net interest bill is set to become the fastest-growing major budget item.

By 2036, net interest outlays will more than double to $2.1 trillion, while defense spending is projected to reach $1.1 trillion.

If current projections hold, the U.S. will spend far more on servicing its debt than on national defense within a decade, raising questions about how future budgets will balance economic stability, security, and growth.

Why This Shift Matters

This crossover isn’t just symbolic. It marks a fundamental shift in how the U.S. allocates its resources—toward servicing past borrowing rather than funding current priorities.

As interest costs rise, a growing share of federal spending is effectively locked in, reducing flexibility for areas like defense, infrastructure, and research. Over time, this can crowd out new investments and make it harder for policymakers to respond to economic downturns or emerging challenges.

In other words, higher interest payments don’t just reflect rising debt—they actively shape what the government can afford to do next.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about which NATO countries dominate defense spending, check out this graphic, which visualizes NATO countries by their estimated defense spending.

3 Costs Impacting Gold Returns

2026-04-29 23:33:00

Published

on

The following content is sponsored by BullionVault

3 Costs Impacting Gold Returns

Key Takeaways

  • Price premiums, including spreads and trading fees, directly impact how much value investors retain when buying and selling gold.
  • Where gold investments are stored plays a critical role in shaping the cost, security, and overall value.
  • Ongoing management fees, particularly in financial products, can reduce returns over time, giving physical gold a potential cost advantage as investments grow.

Commodity price spikes historically capture mass attention, but few have drawn as many eyes as gold. The metal has been on a record-setting bull run, making it a persistent topic of interest since at least 2023.

The historic, multi-year price rally raises an important consideration: how investors choose to access gold can significantly impact their returns. There are several different paths to gold investment, each with its own costs and benefits that shape overall performance.

This graphic, in partnership with BullionVault, shows the key cost factors that impact gold returns.

How to Invest in Gold

Every gold investment starts as a 400-troy-ounce wholesale bar. From this foundation, investors have three options, each with a distinct cost structure that can affect returns over time. They are:

  1. Retail products, like coins and small bars
  2. Financial products, such as ETFs
  3. Wholesale bullion, often stored in professional vaults

Retail and wholesale investments allow for physical ownership of gold with the decision-making power over where and how the gold is held. In contrast, ETFs offer investors shares in a trust to gain easy access and exposure to the price of gold.

Across all methods, three key factors shape returns: price premiums, storage and insurance costs, and ongoing management fees.

The Hidden Premiums of Gold Investment

Every gold investment includes a premium, regardless of the path taken. This premium comes from two factors: the price spread and trading costs.

The price spread indicates the percentage gap between gold’s buy and sell price. It captures real-world costs like minting, shipping and delivery, and dealer markups.

Trading costs are the commissions and trading platform access fees, as a percentage of trade value. Together, these premiums determine how much value investors retain when entering or exiting a position.

Here is a table that shows how spreads and trading fees compare across different gold investment methods, using a baseline $10K investment.

Form Cost
Coins $800
Bars $500
BullionVault $115
ETF $50
Investment Value $10,000

Minimizing these combined costs can help investors retain more capital when seeking gold exposure.

Gold Storage and Ownership Trade-offs

Where gold is kept directly affects the cost, security, and value of the investment. Storage options include homes with or without a safe, bank deposit boxes, and professional vaults.

This table shows what first-year storage costs can look like across methods using a $10K baseline:

Storage Option Cost
Basic home safe $1,985
Safety deposit box $1,125
BullionVault $48
ETF $32
Investment Value $10,000

While home storage offers full control, it often requires additional spending on a safe and insurance. Bank deposit boxes may limit access and exclude insurance coverage.

Meanwhile, ETFs remove storage concerns but also eliminate ownership benefits, while charging expense ratios to cover the operating and management fees of the fund. In contrast, professional vaults can offer lower costs and stronger security through institutional-scale infrastructure.

Platforms like BullionVault, provide access to these vaults, passing on lower costs and economies of scale to individual investors.

Long-Term Cost Efficiency for Gold Investment

Across most metrics, ETFs often appear cheaper at the start, but their cost advantage can change as investments frow. Ongoing fees, though small, can compound and reduce returns over time.

The table below compares the weighted average monthly cost of ETF ownership with BullionVault’s monthly costs.

Investment Value BV Storage Fee /Month US Weighted Avg ETF (0.32%)
1000 4.00 0.27
5000 4.00 1.33
10000 4.00 2.67
15000 4.00 4.00
20000 4.00 5.33
25000 4.00 6.67
30000 4.00 8.00
35000 4.00 9.33
40000 4.00 10.67
45000 4.50 12.00
50000 5.00 13.33
55000 5.50 14.67
60000 6.00 16.00
65000 6.50 17.33
70000 7.00 18.67
75000 7.50 20.00
80000 8.00 21.33
85000 8.50 22.67
90000 9.00 24.00
95000 9.50 25.33
100000 10.00 26.67
Fee as a % of investment value 0.01% ($4 minimum) 0.32%

Source: BullionVault. *Average weighting based on each ETF’s gold holdings.

Based on this structure, once an investment exceeds $15K worth of gold, BullionVault can become more cost-efficient than the average U.S. ETF.

Ultimately, investors that reduce trading, storage, and management fees can retain more of gold’s value. BullionVault offers an easier way to buy, store and sell physical gold at wholesale prices, with access to five professional-market vaults worldwide.

Subscribe

Ranked: America’s Top Non-Ivy League Universities

2026-04-29 22:22:48

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Use This Visualization

Ranked: America’s Top Non-Ivy League Universities

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

  • MIT and Stanford rank ahead of every Ivy League university in the 2026 QS World University Rankings.
  • California has three of the top five non-Ivy schools: Stanford, Caltech, and UC Berkeley.
  • Public universities make up a major part of the list, including UC Berkeley, Michigan, UCLA, and Purdue.

The Ivy League is often shorthand for elite higher education in the U.S., but many of America’s highest-ranked universities sit outside that group.

Two non-Ivy schools, MIT and Stanford, rank ahead of every Ivy League university in the 2026 QS World University Rankings.

This graphic ranks the top 25 non-Ivy League universities in the U.S. using 2026 data from QS World University Rankings, which scores universities based on academic reputation, research, employability, sustainability, and global engagement.

Surpassing the Ivy Leagues

MIT and Stanford are the clearest examples of how U.S. academic prestige extends beyond the Ivy League. Both rank ahead of every Ivy League university in the 2026 QS World University Rankings, with MIT earning a perfect score of 100 and Stanford scoring 98.9.

The following data table lists non-Ivy League universities in the U.S. alongside their QS score for 2026.

Rank University State Score
1 MIT Massachussetts 100
2 Stanford University California 98.9
3 Caltech California 94.3
4 University of Chicago Illinois 93
5 UC Berkeley California 91.2
6 Johns Hopkins Maryland 89.7
7 Northwestern University Illinois 85.1
8 University of Michigan-Ann Arbor Michigan 84.7
9 UCLA California 84.4
10 Carnegie Mellon University Pennsylvania 82.3
11 New York University New York 81.1
12 Duke University North Carolina 79
13 UC San Diego California 76.9
14 UT Austin Texas 76.4
15 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Illinois 75.9
16 University of Washington Washington 72.7
17 Pennsylvania State University Pennsylvania 72.6
18 Boston University Massachussetts 71.1
18 Purdue University Indiana 71.1
20 University of Wisconsin-Madison Wisconsin 66.6
21 UC Davis California 66.3
22 Rice University Texas 65.7
23 Georgia Institute of Technology Georgia 65.5
24 UNC Chapel Hill North Carolina 63.2
25 Texas A&M Texas 63

Decades of academic excellence have turned MIT and Stanford into intellectual centers that power their regions. More than 100 MIT alumni have gone on to win the Nobel Prize, and the university is best known for its contributions to engineering, science, and technology.

Meanwhile, Stanford played a key role in the mid-20th-century creation of Silicon Valley in the Bay Area. Its alumni include the presidents of six countries and multiple Supreme Court justices.

California’s Clear Concentration

California has the strongest showing of any state in the ranking, led by Stanford, Caltech, UC Berkeley, and UCLA. This concentration reflects the state’s mix of private research powerhouses and major public universities.

The UC system spans 10 campuses across the state and serves roughly 300,000 students. In addition to UC Berkeley, the Los Angeles (84.4), San Diego (76.9), and Davis (66.3) campuses are also world-renowned for their academic rigor and contributions to both STEM fields and the social sciences.

Alongside high-research universities like Caltech, the UC system has helped shape California’s reputation as a center of intellectual rigor and entrepreneurship.

Major Schools in the Midwest

While regions west of the Mississippi River have relatively few leading universities outside of Texas, Illinois anchors another hub of major non-Ivy colleges, especially around its largest city.

The University of Chicago (93) is the fourth-best non-Ivy school in the country. Founded by John D. Rockefeller in 1890, it served throughout the 20th century as a key center for law, nuclear research, chemistry, and political economy. Meanwhile, Northwestern University (85.1), located in the Chicago suburb of Evanston, counts nearly 50 Pulitzer Prize winners among its alumni.

Outside the Chicago area, the Midwest is home to leading universities such as the University of Michigan (84.7), Purdue University (71.1), and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (75.9).

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out the The U.S. Dominates the World University Ranking on Voronoi.