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Post-Cowboy Economics: Pay and Prosperity in the New American West

Post-Cowboy Economics: Pay and Prosperity in the New American West

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Mountain West Myth Busting
Review: The authors take a sharp needle to the over-inflated myth that the resource extraction industries (e.g., timber, mining, ranching) are the only ticket out of a downward trend in hourly pay in the region. Post-Cowboy Economics does the hard, analytical work that is required to get to the real root cause of why wages are generally lower in the Mountain West. To make its point, the authors focus on labor and demographic data over the years from 1978 to 1998.

What you learn from their research:

1.The contracting resource extraction industries in the Mountain West appear to have been driven by a pervasive national pattern in which jobs shifted from good production to services.
2.The decline in average pay was due to downward pressure on pay in almost all industries (i.e., the loss of "good" paying jobs).
3.The declines in pay during the 1980's were largely due to back-to-back national recessions. Although national in extent, the recessions hit the Mountain West hard.
4.During the 80's and 90's technological advances and globalization of the American economy emerged as forces that caused the demand for labor to move from workers with little education and few skills toward workers with greater education and skills. These forces were felt the most in rural communities.

The most interesting revelation for me came about when the authors compared wages to the population of the community. The data clearly shows the largest cities provide the best wages, and as you go down in population, the wages follow. This means that in comparing average pay in the Mountain West and the rest of the country, its important to consider where people live and work. Residents who live in the Mountain West typically live in smaller communities than other Americans. And this accounts for the gap in pay.

The authors devote some time on how to form public policy in light of this post-cowboy economy. And thankfully its not one that looks backward to the good old days of job creation based on resource exploitation.


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