As of March 18, 2026, the United States economy finds itself at a crossroads, grappling with a cooling national GDP and the lingering effects of a high-interest-rate environment. However, a starkly different narrative is unfolding in the Southeast. Florida and Georgia have emerged as the dual engines of a regional economic miracle, fueled by a massive influx of capital into data centers, advanced manufacturing, and high-tech logistics. While the broader U.S. economy stares down a projected growth rate of just 1.9%, Florida is currently tracking at 2.3% for 2026, and Georgia is rebounding toward a solid 2.0%, defying the gravity of national macro headwinds. This resilience is not merely a byproduct of the post-pandemic migration boom, but rather a structural shift in the region’s economic identity. The “Sunshine State” and the “Peach State” are no longer just destinations for tourism and agriculture; they have become the preferred theater for the artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure race and the domestic electric vehicle (EV) supply chain. With the recent ribbon-cutting of multi-gigawatt data center campuses and the full operational ramp-up of the Hyundai “Metaplant,” the Sou