The Denver Post

Why people are fleeing Wyoming and flocking to neighborin­g Idaho

- By Andrew Van Dam

Idaho is the fastest-growing state in the union. Half of its neighbors are in the top five. All but one are in the top 13.

The “but one” is Wyoming. It’s dead last: 51st out of a possible 51 (ranking includes Washington, D.C.). Wyoming lost 1.0 percent of its population in 2017 even as Idaho was gaining 2.2 percent.

On the surface, the two states appear to have much in common. They share a border, a birth month (July 1890) and even — for a few brief heady months in 1863 — membership in the Idaho Territory.

So why are so many people leaving Wy-

oming while Idaho booms?

Wyoming has long been the nation’s coal king. The vast operations of the Powder River Basin produce more coal than all but a handful of states put together. But cheap natural gas has reduced power plants’ dependence on the mineral. Wyoming’s mines are shipping out fewer tons of coal and getting paid less for each of them.

That helps explain why the state went from the fourth-fastest-growing in 2012 to rock bottom in 2017.

Idaho, meanwhile, produces no coal to speak of and has no significan­t petroleum or natural-gas reserves, according to the Department of Energy. There’s some mining activity in the state, but it’s small compared with neighbors such as Utah, Nevada and Wyoming.

It wasn’t always so. Gold rushes, starting in the Civil War era, were a defining feature of the Idaho Territory’s early economy. In 1900, 10 years into each state’s history, mining made up as much of Idaho’s employment base as it did Wyoming’s. But in the century to follow, Idaho’s mineral wealth ran low, and it was forced to diversify, while the Cowboy State would double down on coal.

That has given Wyoming a powerful coal industry and median incomes far above Idaho’s, but it also left the state ‘s economy at the mercy of the boom-and-bust cycles that characteri­ze the global commodity market and sapped incentive to build up a more robust local economy.

Similar to Alaska and West Virginia, which also lost population in 2017, Wyoming is suffering from a tamer version of the “re- source curse,” in which natural-resource wealth harms developing countries because it crowds out important long-term investment­s in infrastruc­ture, education and industrial­ization.

Resource-dependent states may see a population recovery in 2018 thanks to a partial recovery in energy prices, but that does nothing to break their cycle of dependence on global commodity markets.

Across the state line in Idaho, the somewhat ironically nicknamed “Gem State” moved on from mines long ago, stepping first into agricultur­e and forestry then into manufactur­ing, technology and services.

As its economy developed, Idaho’s cities far outgrew their Wyoming counterpar­ts. In 1890, Idaho’s population was 1.3 times larger than Wyoming’s. In 2017, it was three times larger. The Boise metro area alone is home to more people than in all of Wyoming.

And Boise is booming. Most newcomers have settled in and around the capital, compoundin­g the state’s urbanizati­on advantage. They appear to be drawn by the city’s combinatio­n of size and low cost of living.

Idaho has the fourth cheapest cost of living in the country, according to a 2017 index from the Council for Community and Economic Research. Only Arkansas, Kentucky and Mississipp­i are cheaper. Wyoming is 29th.

It’s the tired old parable of two siblings, separated at birth. One began with natural gifts and found little incentive to grow beyond them, and another was forced to play a weaker hand but became stronger and more resilient in the process. There’s probably a moral in there somewhere, but it may just be “You should probably move to Idaho.”

Wyoming is suffering from a tamer version of the “resource curse,” in which naturalres­ource wealth harms developing countries because it crowds out long-term investment­s in infrastruc­ture, education and industrial­ization.

 ?? Matt McClain, The Washington Post ?? A train carrying cars full of coal slices through Gillette, Wyo., which calls itself “the energy capital of the nation.”
Matt McClain, The Washington Post A train carrying cars full of coal slices through Gillette, Wyo., which calls itself “the energy capital of the nation.”
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