Wisconsin

WI · Madison · 6.0M people

Timeline
2026Present
NOW
EVENT HORIZON
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Future Path

Pick a future path. Every number on this page updates with the impacts and the ranked actions for that path.

Disruption profile

Wisconsin vs national average across the 9 disruption dimensions.

HighActive disruption underway in defense contracting

ModerateBuilding pressure in all sectors — especially finance

ModerateBuilding pressure in higher education

ModerateModerate exposure across agriculture

LowModerate exposure across media

LowModerate exposure across knowledge work

LowLimited disruption signal

LowLimited disruption signal

MinimalLimited disruption signal

Wisconsin vs US National Average

Wisconsin exceeds state average on 2/9 dimensions. Highest divergence: Quantum Readiness (-60)

Click a dimension label to explore

Wisconsin US National
Disruption Digest

Wisconsin's primary disruption driver is political risk at 76/100, while other dimensions remain moderate. Economic disruption (59/100) and political risk form the dual pressure points to watch.

Supporting detail

Open any section to dig into the underlying data.

Live economic indicators

Federal Reserve and BLS state series

AI industry exposure

Gauge of vulnerability and major AI employers

Moderate Exposure45/100

AI exposure is building but not yet acute. industrial automation stand to gain more than manufacturing lose in the near term.

Most Vulnerable

manufacturing

insurance

dairy processing

Most Benefiting

industrial automation

health IT

Cross-signal alerts

When multiple risk signals converge on this state

AI sentiment + SWOT

Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats

AI Impact Analysis

Click Generate to analyze anti-AI sentiment and create a SWOT analysis for Wisconsin using xAI Grok.

Key traits

State characteristics shaping the disruption response

UW-Madison Top-10 Public Research UniversityManufacturing Core (Dairy, Paper, Machinery, Medical Devices)Great Lakes Freshwater Access (Lake Michigan, Lake Superior)Swing-State Political Volatility

Analysis

Long-form briefing for this state

Wisconsin's economy is anchored by advanced manufacturing and agriculture, particularly dairy production where the state leads nationally. The manufacturing base extends well beyond food processing into industrial machinery (Rockwell Automation, Oshkosh Corporation), medical devices (GE Healthcare's imaging division), and paper/forest products. Milwaukee serves as the primary commercial hub, while Madison combines state government with one of the nation's strongest public research universities.

UW-Madison is the state's most significant asset for long-term disruption readiness. The university ranks in the top 10 nationally for research expenditure, with notable programs in biomedical engineering, computer science, and agricultural genomics. The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) has a strong commercialization track record, and the Madison startup ecosystem has produced several notable health-tech and agri-tech companies. However, the broader state lacks the density of tech employers needed to retain graduates at scale.

Ecological stress is moderate, buffered by Great Lakes freshwater access that positions Wisconsin favorably as water scarcity increases in the Sun Belt and Mountain West. Climate change is shifting growing seasons and increasing precipitation volatility, but the state faces far less catastrophic risk than coastal or arid states. Political risk is elevated due to Wisconsin's status as a razor-thin swing state, producing policy whiplash between administrations on labor, education, and environmental regulation. The Foxconn debacle (a $4.5B subsidy commitment for a factory that was never fully built) remains a cautionary tale about industrial policy risk.

Sources

Government, academic, and live data feeds

Population: 5.97M (Census Jul 2025). GDP: $451B (BEA Q3 2025). Leading dairy producer, major manufacturing base in machinery, paper products, and medical devices.