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Could Wyoming be headed to another energy boom?

By
Bill Sniffin

Frankly, this invasion of Ukraine by Russia has me nervous as a cat. There is just no good way for this to end.
And as gasoline and natural gas prices rise, the country is reeling from inflation. 
Meanwhile, out here on the frontier, there could be a silver lining to all of this.
Let me tell you about an old teeter-totter adage believed by a great many Wyoming leaders. In this theory, it’s believed the Wyoming economy operates in the opposite way of the national USA economy.
It goes like this: When the country is struggling, Wyoming is thriving. When Wyoming struggles, the country thrives.
The obvious answer to this is everybody’s reliance on fossil fuel energy. Thus, when national energy prices are high, Wyoming booms, and the country struggles. When prices are low, the country booms and Wyoming struggles. Is there more to it than this simple formula?
Or as the old bumper sticker read: “Please God, give me one more boom. This time I promise not to piddle it away.”
Wyoming is a commodity state, which means that its economy booms — or busts — based on the prices that are charged for energy in the form of oil, natural gas, coal, trona, and uranium.
Out here on our isolated island, we sometimes think we are immune to the economic calamities happening elsewhere in the country and the world. Not true. National and international events are affecting our economy in a big way.
It seems like the last three boom-bust cycles in Wyoming and the U.S. appear to be two ends of the aforementioned teeter-totter. The Cowboy State’s economy has been counter-cyclical to the economy of the rest
of America.
 In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the USA was booming. Wyoming was hurting. Then-Gov. Stan Hathaway said when he took office in 1966, he discovered the state had just $80 in its general fund. You may have to go back to some dustbowl states of the 1930s to find state governments in that bad of a fiscal shape.
Then Wyoming’s economy took off in the 1970s and peaked in 1981. Then it tanked in the mid-1980s and early 1990s.
Generally, the U.S. was doing well from 1985 to 1998, while we struggled to get back on our feet.
From 2002 to 2012, our statewide economy soared as energy prices spiked to all-time levels. At the same time the national economy slipped partially under the burden of those same high energy prices.
In 2008 the economy was the biggest single issue in that national presidential election. Everyone was saying the U.S. was in a recession. Here in Wyoming? We had $11 billion in the bank and things were going very well. We have a lot more than that in the
bank today.
Thus, the theory – as the U.S. economy goes down, does Wyoming’s economy
go up?
Let’s look at the 2022 economy in Wyoming. Douglas is booming with oil and gas development. Cheyenne and Laramie are doing just fine, thank you, because of huge numbers of state workers and aggressive job development.
Jackson is in a league of its own as the most expensive place to live in the country. Cody, Sheridan, Evanston, Buffalo, and Lander are holding up fine with a combination of tourism, outdoor recreation, and lots of retirees moving in.
Gillette and Rock Springs have been two of our most vibrant small cities over the past three decades. Leaders there are working hard to keep things going up, despite efforts by international forces to reduce fossil fuel
dependency.
A few years ago, a panel was held in Cheyenne to talk about Wyoming’s endless boom-and-bust cycle. It made me recall that former University of Wyoming Professor Phil Roberts has documented 13 of these busts over the 132 years since 1890 statehood. This is a bust every decade. That many busts could make a state and its citizens somewhat gun-shy, I would think.
Discussing and “cussing” economic development is one of my favorite topics. Sometimes it feels like we are chasing our tails. Creating jobs and keeping your town viable is not getting
any easier.
So, hold on to your hats over the rest of 2022. As energy prices soar across the country and across the world, there is a pretty good chance this will be good economic news for Wyoming.
Bill Sniffin is a retired newspaper publisher who has penned a number of books about Wyoming. Check out additional columns written by Bill at www.billsniffin.com, and find volumes from his coffee table book series, which have sold over 30,000 copies, for sale at the News Letter Journal.
Editors Note: This column was edited for content. 

 

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