New evidence of shocking wealth gap between US states

The US Census Bureau released its 2011 American Community Survey Estimates on Wednesday.

We've gone through it and one thing jumped out to us: the disparity state by state.

Here's what we found: 

Median household income was the most disparate comparison between states. It was highest in the Northeast, but Maryland led all states with an average median income of $70,004 in 2011.

In contrast, median household income in 2011 was lowest in the Southeast US; Mississippi had the lowest average of all states at $36,919. Puerto Rico's rate was by far the lowest of all at $18,660.

The report also highlighted the failed fight against poverty.

Twenty-two States, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia all have 16 percent or more of their respective populations living in poverty. And the recovery hasn't been much better; DC, Puerto Rico, and 32 states had no significant change in poverty rate from 2010-2011. In fact, in 17 states the poverty rate increased from 2010-2011. Vermont was the only state in which the poverty rate decreased in from 2010-2011

The Washington, DC metro area had a poverty rate of 8.3 percent — the lowest of all analyzed in the report. The Lakeland-Winter Haven metro area in Florida had the highest: 19.4 percent.

As far as health care goes, Massachusetts had the best coverage rate for young adults; in 2011, 92.1 percent of adults aged 19 to 25 had any kind of health insurance in Massachusetts. New Hampshire had the highest percentage of adults aged 19-25 with private health insurance at 75.8 percent.

The lowest coverage rate was over 30 percent less — 59.3 percent of adults aged 19 to 25 had any kind of health insurance in Texas. Arizona had the lowest percentage of adults aged 19-25 with private health insurance: 51.6 percent.

More from our partner Business Insider:

Business Insider: UBS Just Cranked Up Its Year-End Target For The S&P 500 By 150 Points

Business Insider: Jeff Gundlach Has Been The Victim Of A Massive, $10 Million Theft

Business Insider: We Found A Senior Wall Street Banker Who Thinks Romney Has A Great Chance Of Winning

Business Insider: ECB Member Gives A Brilliant Explanation Of The Euro Crisis And What Is Being Done About It

Business Insider: DEUTSCHE BANK: Western Economies Are Screwed, And Investors Face A 'Disturbing Paradox'

Will you support The World with a monthly donation?

Every day, reporters and producers at The World are hard at work bringing you human-centered news from across the globe. But we can’t do it without you. We need your support to ensure we can continue this work for another year.

Make a gift today, and you’ll help us unlock a matching gift of $67,000!