It is estimated that just 150 minutes of cycling or walking spent by each adult per week could save the US economy about $28 billion a year. Yet, cycling and walking still lack the widespread popularity required to realize this level of economic benefit.

  • Between 2007 and 2016, despite a slight increase in the number of people walking or biking to work, only 3.4 percent of the total US population commuted by foot or bike, according to the Alliance for Biking and Walking. In the most populous cities, however, this proportion is higher with an average of 6.4 percent of people biking or walking to work.
  • Beyond personal health and leisure preferences, structural barriers exist that prevent stronger growth in biking and walking, including a lack of infrastructure, weather, and the distance between residence and place of employment.

The popularity of bicycling and walking emerges in studies of general physical activity in the United States. States in which biking and walking to work are more common also report higher shares of the population engaging in at least 150 minutes of physical activity per week.

  • Residents of Oregon, Colorado, and Hawaii lead the country in meeting the recommended weekly physical activity levels and are also among the top 10 states for biking and walking to work. The question becomes, does walking and biking lead to more physical activity, or do physically active people walk and bike more often? We'll leave that to the researchers to answer.

The popularity of cycling and walking remains widely divergent among the 50 states, suggesting that health insurers to government planners should take heed in developing incentives to encourage these forms of physical activity.

  • The percentage of people who commute by foot in states such as Alaska, New York, and Vermont is almost three times the national average. Several states also have above average rates of bike commuters; bike-to-work rates in Oregon, Montana, and Colorado are three to four times the national average.
  • The highest share of adults biking to work is found in the Northeast of the US, where the climate is not as hot as in the south. Yet, the data suggests that bicycling safety may be far more detrimental to the popularity of bike commuting than climate. States with the highest bicyclist fatality rates - Mississippi, Arkansas, and Alabama, with about 30 fatalities per 10,000 bike commuters annually - also report lower shares of the population cycle. All eyes should be on the states such as Rhode Island, where from 2008 to 2014, the state increased obligated funds for cycling and pedestrian projects from $20 million to $32 million.

Coronavirus Data and Insights

Live data and insights on Coronavirus around the world, including detailed statistics for the US, EU, and China — confirmed and recovered cases, deaths, alternative data on economic activities, customer behavior, supply chains, and more.

Related Insights from Knoema

Intoxicants usage among US students by grade, sex and race

Drug use among American students is a persistent and serious problem in modern US society. The development of telecommunication services has seriously simplified the process of accessing drugs not only for adults, but even for children, and contributed to a shift in the use patterns of 12th, 10th and 8th graders who regularly use intoxicants. According to the survey conducted by US National Center for Health Statistics, alcohol remains the most "popular" intoxicant among observed groups. The use of alcohol by the survey group, along with cigarettes, cocaine, and (for the most...

Health-Care Efficiency Around the World

The Russian health-care system is one of the least efficient in the world, but how inefficient is it? As low as it gets within the universe measured by the Health-Care Efficiency Index from Bloomberg. This year’s Index scored Russia as the least efficient of the 55 countries covered. Jordan, Colombia, Azerbaijan and Brazil rounded out the bottom five, with the US not far behind, scoring 50th in the ranking. The index evaluates data for countries with populations of 5 million people or more, GDPs per capita of at least $5,000, and population life expectancy over 70 years, with a...

Top Pharmaceutical Companies, 2015

As of 2014, the global pharmaceutical market was worth about $1 trillion US dollars in sales and is expected to increase by US$300 billion within next two years. The ten largest companies with annual sales over $20 billion controlled over one-third of this market. The biggest pharmaceutical companies by sales according to the 2015 edition of Financial Times Global 500 companies are Jonhson & Johnson, Pfizer, Novartis, Roche, and Merck. First ranked company, Jonhson & Johnson, is engaged in R&D, manufacture, and sale of products in the field of human health and...

The Global Burden of Non-Communicable Disease

Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) kill about 40 million people annually. Comprising chronic lung diseases, diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular diseases, NCDs are the result of a characteristic Western, predominantly urban lifestyle and negative environmental factors. Almost three-quarters of global NCD deaths arise from low or middle income countries, where the incidence of NCDs is on the rise. - World Economic Forum The major common lifestyle risk factors of non-communicable diseases are physical inactivity, air pollution, obesity, smoking, and drinking. Insufficient physical...