๐ฐ $20K PreK Spend Per Student In DC. 150K EVs in Norway. Cybercrime Complaints Triple.
Chart of the Day #194 looks at Education Expenditure, Electric Vehicles, and Cyber Crime
Ni Hao ๐ฎ
Toyota has delayed US electric vehicle manufacturing to 2026 amid slowing global EV demand. Despite this, the company remains committed to its target of 1.5M EVs by 2026. Maryland Kids Code law comes into effect, prohibiting social media companies from data harvesting and requiring private accounts for minors
Today's Topics
๐ฐ Education Expenditure. District of Columbia spent $20k per PreK student
๐ Electric Vehicles. 150K EVs registered in Norway in 2022
๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ Cyber Crime. 3x rise in cybercrime complaints over a decade
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๐ฐ District of Columbia Spent $20K per PreK Student
US state spending per child in pre-kindergarten programs was at an average of $6,571 in 2022. The District of Columbia led with $20,442 per child, followed by New Jersey at $16,728. States like Massachusetts and Florida spent far less, at $2,027 and $2,254, respectively. This disparity in funding reflects differences in state priorities and resources, as well as the cost of living and education across the different states.
๐ 150K EVs Registered in Norway in 2022
Norway is among the fastest adopters of electric vehicle (EV) technology in Europe, with registrations rising from 380 in 2010 to 154,416 in 2022. Over 79% of all new vehicles sold in 2022 were electric. A pivotal year was 2020, with over 105K registrations, highlighting strong consumer demand. Norwayโs incentives, like tax exemptions and an extensive charging network, have driven this shift toward EVs, aiming for 100% zero-emission car sales by 2025.
๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ 3x Rise in Cybercrime Complaints Over a Decade
Complaints about internet crime submitted to IC3 rose from 17 thousand in 2000 to nearly 900 thousand in 2023. A significant spike occurred between 2019 and 2020, with complaints more than doubling from 470k to 800k, driven by increased cybercrime during the COVID-19 pandemic as individuals and businesses relied heavily on digital platforms for communication, work, and commerce.
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