Caterpillar (market cap = $73B) is one of the 6 largest industrial companies.
General Motors ($38B) and Ford ($27B) are the largest non-Elon Musk owned car makers.
Procter & Gamble ($329B) is the 2nd-largest consumer defensive firm (after Walmart).
UnitedHealth Group ($298B) is the 2nd-largest healthcare company (after Johnson & Johnson).
It’s got serious brain power, too
We’re talking “16 of the country’s 50 top-ranked medical schools, five of the 25 best computer-science ones, and 17 of 63 leading research universities,” The Economist says.
Big Ten universities pull in annual research funds of $10.6B (more than the combined haul of the Ivy League and California universities).
A 2019 Brookings Institution report argued that money and resources should be spread to new innovation hubs. Six of the report’s top 15 “potential growth centers” were Midwestern:
Madison, Wisconsin
Minneapolis-St.Paul-Bloomington, Minnesota
Columbus, Ohio
The Chicago metro area
Akron, Ohio
St. Louis, Missouri
To paraphrase 19th-century newspaperman Horace Greeley: “Go Midwest, young man.”