State-Level Institutional Capacity Assessment
MS · Gov. Tate Reeves (R) · rural low density
Population
2.9M
GSP
$140B
Total Budget
$7B
Budget / capita
$2,381
Legal Regime
Dillon's Rule
Binding Constraint
Groundwork · Primary constraint
Building state institutional muscle to direct external resources rather than be directed by them. Mississippi has the highest federal-funding share in the nation by some metrics (33% USAFacts FY2023 of state/local revenue; ~45% of adopted FY23 budget per Oxford Eagle), the lowest median household income ($53K), the weakest pension funded ratio in this cohort (57% PERS), and persistent population decline. The state has institutional bright spots — 35-year GFOA streak (longest verified in MS Department of Finance), Craig Orgeron returning as CIO (past NASCIO President), Jan 2025 ITS AI Innovation Hub launch — but Cluster D work is converting federal pass-through into durable state capacity rather than letting it flow through to programs that don't compound.
6-Dimension Assessment
Mississippi's institutional life is shaped by chronic external-resource dependence (33% of state/local revenue from federal transfers, ~45% of FY23 adopted budget when broader federal flows are counted), persistent population decline, and lowest-in-nation median income. Coastal counties (Gulfport-Biloxi, Pascagoula) anchored by federal installations and shipbuilding; Delta region carries multigenerational poverty patterns; Jackson metro operates with state-imposed oversight of the city's water system (2022-present). The recent ITS AI Innovation Hub launch (Jan 2025) and CIO Orgeron's return mark early institutional rebuilding.
Peer States
Louisiana
Groundworkresource extraction dependent
Alabama
Systematizationhigh growth southern
West Virginia
Groundworkrural low density
Peer states share structural profile (cluster, scale, archetype). Peer match is intra-level — states match states.
Innovation Pathway Recommendations
Restructuring how state government hires, classifies, pays, retains, and advances its workforce. Draws on the federal CHCO Council reform agenda, Recoding America Fund priorities, Beeck Center research on state digital service workforce, and the 30+ states (Maryland, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Georgia, Tennessee, others) that have removed degree requirements for state jobs.
For Cluster D (Groundwork)
For Cluster D states, the Recoding America Fund's New Governors playbook applies: triage the top 5 vacancies, fix the worst friction, and use philanthropic capacity-building grants to underwrite the transition. Don't try to rebuild the whole system at once.
H1 absorption pattern: civil service 'modernization' becomes a fellowship program that brings in technologists for 2 years, then loses them all to private sector and reverts. The H2+ test is whether the underlying classifications, pay schedules, and protections have actually changed for the permanent workforce — not just a graft-on accelerator that the agency culture rejects when grant funding ends.
Building dedicated state capacity to identify, win, deploy, and report on federal grants — competitive applications, formula grant maximization, IRA/IIJA/CHIPS absorption, multi-state coordination, and federal-program negotiation. Draws on Brookings work on state intergovernmental affairs, NGA's federal-state coordination practices, and the Rockefeller Institute Balance of Payments framing.
For Cluster D (Groundwork)
For Cluster D states, this is the highest-leverage move. Federal pass-through dependence + thin internal capacity = trapped state. The Recoding America Fund's New Governors project (NJ + VA initial cohort, expanding 2026) is the prototype intervention.
H1 absorption pattern: a state hires a 'federal grants coordinator' who attends conferences and writes status reports without authority to actually shape inter-agency grant strategy. The H2+ test is whether per-capita federal funding actually increases relative to peers, and whether grants are deployed for transformation versus filling pre-existing budget holes.
Shifting state procurement from compliance-based to outcomes-based — performance contracting, modular IT procurement, vendor diversification, agile contracting frameworks. Draws on Harvard Government Performance Lab's problem-based procurement methodology, NASPO cooperative purchasing, and the Recoding America Fund's procedural-bloat focus area.
For Cluster D (Groundwork)
For Cluster D states, join multistate cooperative purchasing (NASPO ValuePoint, Sourcewell) to access pre-negotiated contracts without state-level RFP capacity overhead. Most cost-effective entry point.
H1 absorption pattern: 'modular procurement' or 'performance contracting' language gets adopted into existing compliance-bound state RFPs without changing evaluation criteria, contract length, or incumbent vendor relationships. New vendors don't enter; the same firms win with newer vocabulary. The H2+ test is whether contract performance is measured by outcomes and whether vendor diversity actually increases.
Cities in Mississippi (1)
State Community Context
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Data as of Compiled May 2026; USAFacts FY2023 · medium confidence
Sources · Data as of Compiled May 2026; USAFacts FY2023 · medium confidence
The Civic Infrastructure Diagnostic Framework’s structural elements — the four cluster labels, the six capacity dimensions, and the binding-constraint framing — are licensed under CC BY 4.0. Anyone may use or adapt them with attribution. Tool implementation and full article text © 2026 JTV Advisory LLC.