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Old trucks once used in a mining operation at the bottom of Grand Canyon. Photo by Ray Wheeler. |
Because of their heavy reliance on federal subsidy and their historic dependency upon highly unstable mineral and energy markets, the economies of Colorado Plateau communities have always been notoriously volatile. Mineral prices oscillate wildly as new ore bodies are discovered, as new technologies create instant new markets that rapidly destroy existing markets, and as the chaos of global geopolitics daily raises and lowers the price of competing foreign reserves. The profitability of ranching fluctuates too, knocked about by the vicissitudes of weather and yo-yo-ing energy, land, feed, fertilizer, and beef prices. Tourism is far more stable, but it too can be affected by energy prices and changing trends in the national economy.
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Moab, Utah, and Spanish Valley. Colorado River in foreground. Most towns on the Colorado Plateau are tightly constrained by canyon walls, non-arable land, and federally-owned land. |
Between 1950 and 1962 Moabs population grew by 900 percent, ballooning from 1,100 to 11,000. But in 1963, after the first uranium boom ended and a mining explosion shut down the nearby Texas Gulf potash plant, Moabs population plummeted 50% in one year.
At the climax of the uranium boom in 1956 McCalls magazine had dubbed Moab the richest town in America after computing that there were twenty millionaires for every 250 citizens48 times the national average. But three decades later, after the collapse of the Arab oil embargo and the abrupt end of the so-called "energy crisis", the regions economy imploded dramatically. Between 1980 and 1986 Grand County lost more than 1,000 jobsthirty percent of nonfarm wage and salary employmentsending the countys unemployment rate soaring to Depression-era levels of nearly 20 percent.
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