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Wyoming offers a favorable climate for business...Reprinted from the Wyoming Business Report

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Real Estate Agent with Chase Brothers Properties, LLC

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Fraser Institute: Wyo ducks “resource curse”

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A new study shows that states like Wyoming, with small government, low taxes, and labor market freedom, enjoy greater benefits from natural resource development than states with large and intrusive government policies.

Louisiana, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming are singled out as states with high levels of economic freedom that have benefitted from resource development. On the other hand, Alaska, Montana, and West Virginia have failed to fully benefit from their natural resources, due in part to intrusive government policies that limit economic freedom.

The study offers an empirical analysis weighing the economic growth rates of resource-dependent states against the Economic Freedom of North America index to determine the level of economic freedom required for states to benefit from natural resource development.

Developed by the Fraser Institute, the Economic Freedom of North America index measures the impact of economic freedom on the level of economic activity and the growth of economic activity, utilizing 10 components based on size of government, taxation, and labor market freedom. Research suggests that in regions lacking policies consistent with free markets, private-property rights, and a stable and fair legal system, natural resource dependence can weaken economic growth -- a phenomenon known as the "resource curse."

A comparison of Wyoming and West Virginia, the nation's top producers of coal, best illustrates this dichotomy. While both states are among the nation's most resource dependent, Wyoming is much more so, with coal accounting for nearly 34 percent of gross state product (GSP) compared to West Virginia 's 14 percent. However, Wyoming boasts an economic freedom rating of 6.5, which puts it above the critical threshold to overcome the "resource curse."

As a result of its higher level of economic freedom, Wyoming enjoys a per-capita gross state product (GSP) more than $24,000 higher than that of West Virginia , where the economic freedom score is only 5.3.

"Compounded annually over many years, this gap in growth rates will create a significant difference between living standards in the states with a higher level of economic freedom and those with a lower level," said Fred McMahon, director of the Fraser Institute's Center for Global Mining Studies.

“Sound economic institutions are indispensable to economic growth, and this rings especially true in resource-rich states,” said Joab Corey, the study's author and a professor of economics at Florida State University . “These states need less government involvement in the economy, lower taxes, and freer labor markets to truly benefit from natural resource development.”

Reprinted from the Wyoming Business Report December 18, 2009

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