IBD: North Dakota Oil Boom Should Inspire Federal Energy Policy

North Dakota’s per-capita income jumped 78% in the past 12 years, largely due to its fossil fuel boom. Imagine the impact at the national level if Washington stopped blocking energy development.

North Dakota has become a land of prosperity since 2000, when its per-capita income was $25,592, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Last year it hit $45,747.

In energy-rich North Dakota, per-capita income growth of 78.7% is more than twice the national average of 37.4% over the last dozen years, and its per-capita income rank has risen from 38th in the nation to ninth.

North Dakota has the highest per-capita income in the BEA’s Plains region and exceeds the national average by more than $4,000.

While the nation staggers through a sluggish, jobless recovery, North Dakota has the lowest unemployment rate in the country at 3.3%. The jobless rate in Williston, the core of the state’s oil patch, which is fed by the Bakken Formation, is impossibly low at less than 1%.

The boom is happening across all of the state’s industries, but it’s the oil and gas sectors that are primarily stoking the fortunes. North Dakota is now the fourth-leading oil producer in the country, having passed Louisiana, and is on track to soon pass California for third.

IBD

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One Response to IBD: North Dakota Oil Boom Should Inspire Federal Energy Policy

  1. The federal government is the enemy of prosperity and freedom, it should be appropriately dealt with.

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