Blog Posts > Rural West Virginia’s Economy, Health and Growth Lags Behind the Rest of State
October 23, 2018

Rural West Virginia’s Economy, Health and Growth Lags Behind the Rest of State

For Immediate Release
Media ContactCaitlin Cook (304) 543-4879
(Charleston, WV) – West Virginia’s population is increasingly living in urban areas, with those urban areas experiencing all the state’s job growth in the past quarter century, leaving rural West Virginia behind in many key areas, according to a report released today from the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy.
The report, State of Rural West Virginia, shows rural West Virginians primarily have poorer health, lower educational attainment levels, lower wages, are older and have fewer job opportunities outside of industrial and extractive industries, underscoring the contrast between the state’s rural and urban areas.

“While the nation has enjoyed over eight years of one the longest economic recoveries on record, West Virginia’s economic growth has been lacking,” Sean O’Leary, WVCBP senior analyst and report co-author said. “But a closer look shows two very different economies in the state. While the state’s urban areas have been characterized by moderate growth, more educated workers and higher incomes, the state’s rural areas have seen higher rates of poverty, less education in its workforce and nearly a quarter of a century of no net job growth.”

Rural West Virginia has been plagued with job losses from 2007 – 2016, losing more than 21,000 jobs, or eight percent, highlighting the uneven balance of West Virginia’s weak economic recovery.

Over the past decade, West Virginia has been one of the few states to lose population, and that loss has largely occurred in the state’s rural areas. Between the 2000 and 2010 decennial Census, West Virginia’s metro areas saw an increase in population of nearly 50,000 people, a five percent increase. In contrast, rural West Virginia experienced a population loss of roughly 4,600 people, a 0.6 percent decline.

The state’s rural and urban areas do share a lack of racial diversity, with White people accounting for more than 90 percent of the population in the state’s rural and urban areas.
“Sustainable growth and broader economic growth can occur in rural areas of the state if policymakers put forth policies that invest in the people and public structures that provide the foundation for economic opportunity and make necessary quality of life improvements,” O’Leary said.
These policies can include: expanding high-speed internet, addressing the opioid crisis and improving rural health, enacting policies to boost wages and labor force participation, tax reforms that would provide revenue to invest in the state and policies that reduce racial disparities.
The West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy is a public policy research organization that is nonpartisan, nonprofit and statewide. The Center focuses on how policy decisions affect all West Virginians, especially low- and moderate-income families. 

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