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Hardcover $60.00 ISBN: 9781559638203 Published July 2001
Paperback $35.00 ISBN: 9781559638210 Published July 2001

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Post-Cowboy Economics

Pay And Prosperity In The New American West

 Post-Cowboy Economics
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Thomas M. Power and Richard Barrett

225 pages | 6 x 9

A great deal of reactionary political fire in the Mountain West has been aimed at environmental protection measures that are perceived to have destroyed or diminished the livelihoods of long-time residents. Conventional wisdom sees the economic woes afflicting the region -- declining pay, growing inequality, persistent poverty -- as a direct result of increasingly strict environmental regulations that have crippled natural resource industries such as mining and logging.

In Post-Cowboy Economics, economists Thomas Michael Power and Richard Barrett provide a new interpretation of the economy of the Mountain West. Based on evidence from a wide variety of sources, including data on individual employment and income histories of more than 300,000 residents, they clearly demonstrate that the region's economic misfortunes are not the result of changes in regional industrial structure but rather are local manifestations of pervasive national and international trends. The authors:

  • discuss and critique entrenched conventional wisdom and its policy implications
  • present an empirical analysis of changes in the region
  • offer a new interpretation of events affecting the regional economy
  • set forth public policies that will work to protect and enhance the economic well-being of its residents and communities

The authors' analysis and interpretation make a compelling case that despite incomes that are low compared to the rest of the country, the region is not suffering from general impoverishment, and that environmental protection, rather than threatening economic well-being, enhances welfare and protects the very source of the economic vitality that the Mountain West enjoys. Throughout, they argue that fearful, crisis driven environmental and economic development policies are unnecessary and inappropriate, and often counterproductive.

Post-Cowboy Economics is an important work for professionals and scholars involved with environmental policy, economic development, and resource management, as well as anyone interested in the future of the American West."

"

Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Preface
Chapter 1 The View from the Cowboy Economy
Chapter 2 Economic Deterioration amid Rapid Economic
Growth? Trends in Pay and Income
in the Mountain West
Chapter 3 The Changing Structures of the Mountain West
Economies
Chapter 4 Converting ""Good"" Jobs to ""Lousy"" Jobs? The
Effect of Changes in Industrial Structure on
Wages and Well-Being
Chapter 5 Is the Mountain West Really Poor? Size of Place
and Relative Pay and Income
Chapter 6 Trapped in Images from the Past
Chapter 7 What Should Be Done? Appropriate Public
Economic Policies for the Mountain West
Chapter 8 Conclusion
Appendix Technical Notes
References
About the Authors
Index"

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