﻿Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0
Author-Name: Sarah Bui
Author-Name: Timothy Freeman
Author-Name: Ricardo Hausmann
Author-Email: ricardo_hausmann@harvard.edu
Author-Workplace-Name: Harvard's Growth Lab
Author-Person: pha552
Author-Name: Farah Kaddah
Author-Workplace-Name: Harvard's Growth Lab
Author-Name: Lucas Lamby
Author-Workplace-Name: Center for International Development at Harvard University
Author-Name: Tim O'Brien
Author-Email: tim_obrien@hks.harvard.edu
Author-Workplace-Name: Center for International Development at Harvard University
Author-Name: Eric S. M. Protzer
Author-Email: eprotzer@hks.harvard.edu
Author-Workplace-Name: Center for Global Development
Title: Housing in Wyoming: Constraints and Solutions
Abstract: Quantitative evidence supports the contention that Wyoming’s housing market is constrained, to a greater degree than many other parts of the US. Prices are persistently above expectations given economic fundamentals in most parts of the state, and the supply of new housing in Wyoming is on average less responsive to price increases than in other US counties. This has undermined natural population growth and contributed to a low amount of population density close to city centers in Wyoming, as compared to other US cities with comparable population levels. Importantly, this phenomenon is not simply the result of pandemic-era economic frictions. The evidence shows that these constraints have durably persisted in Wyoming. 
 This housing constraint weighs heavily on the broader Wyoming’s economy, and chokes off growth in new industries that could add to the Wyoming economy beyond its natural resource base. Businesses consistently report a lack of access to workforce as a leading problem that ultimately results from a lack of housing. Some businesses have even tried to create their own housing for employees, and news reports abound of teachers and nurses who secure jobs in Wyoming communities but then have to leave because they cannot find housing.
 Key problems behind Wyoming’s housing constraints include excessive regulations concerning housing density and insufficient investment in arterial infrastructure. We suggest a portfolio of policy changes for the state of Wyoming to explore in order to solve its housing constraints.
Creation-Date: 2023-04
Keywords: wyoming, housing market, deregulation, arterial infrastructure
Number: 213
Handle: RePEc:glh:wpfacu:213
File-Url: https://growthlab.hks.harvard.edu/sites/projects.iq.harvard.edu/files/growthlab/files/2023-04-cid-wp-435-wyoming-housing-note.pdf
File-Format: application/pdf