- Economy of West Virginia
The Economy of
West Virginia is one of the weakest in theUnited States (only Mississippi has a weaker economy)Fact|date=June 2007.Coal is one of the state's primary economic resources. The effort of unions to organize miners is a violent chapter in the state's history. In 1933, thePresident of the United States Franklin Delano Roosevelt threatened to call the National Guard in order to forcibly unionize parts of Raleigh County. Nevertheless, labor organizing persisted under the leadership ofJohn L. Lewis and theUnited Mine Workers .The state has an extensive network of
railroad s, and much of the coal is transported by rail. The railways were once one of the largest customers for coal to drive thesteam locomotive s, but these have been replaced bydiesel locomotives. Coal is rarely used now for home heating. Most coal today is used bypower plants to produceelectricity , both in West Virginia, and in other eastern states.West Virginia was one of the first states to engage in drilling for oil. Small to medium oil and natural gas fields still exist and are scattered mostly in the
Allegheny Plateau and theCumberland Plateau in an arc throughout the western part of state.Farming is practiced throughout West Virginia, but in a form different from large extensive cash-crop agriculture elsewhere in the USA. The modal average farm size was a smallish 140 to 179 acres (567,000 to 724,000 m²), most statistics in this section are taken from the 2002 US Census of Agriculture for West Virginia, which sold less than $2,500 of crops annually. Family and single-owner operation worked 92.7% of the farms, and an astounding 96.9% were totally or partly owned by the operator. On the other hand, only 50.5% of the state's farmers considered farming to be their primary occupation, with a significant number of hours worked elsewhere each year. It should be noted that the rural poverty rate in West Virginia is 20.4% and that this figure is five points higher than the urban poverty rate.
This description of farming portrays an independent and self-sufficient base of small land owners, but also a significant amount of rural
poverty .As can be expected in a rugged terrain, raising animals was far more important than growing vegetative crops. Income from animals exceeded income from plants by about 7 to 1, with much of the non-animal income derived from sales of fodder. The chief animals raised were cattle and chickens.
In the ridge and valley area along the eastern border near
Virginia 'sShenandoah Valley , subsidiary valleys are wide and there are some belts of richsoil which are extensivelyfarm ed. In 2002, all of the top five counties by agricultural dollar value were located near the eastern Virginia border.In traditional frontier agriculture there was much gathering of wild "greens" and other vegetation to supplement the diet. One area where this practice is still significant is the gathering of wild North American
ginseng , often for the Asian market. Wild gathered ginseng contributed about $2 million in 2000 to the West Virginia economy, a figure larger than many conventional cultivated vegetable and fruit crops. Other wild greens, such as sour dock, lambs quarters, andwild leek (or "ramps") are also still gathered by many for table use, although today more on the basis ofavocation or keeping up traditions than out of necessity.Along the western edges of the state the large rivers of the mid-continent erode a distance into the hills and it is here, in the west, that some dense pockets of heavy industry appear. In the
Kanawha River Valley near Charleston and along the southernOhio River Valley near Huntington chemicals predominate, attracted by a readily available labor force and access bybarge carriers. Metallurgy, especiallysteel , has been predominant in theNorthern Panhandle due to a spill-over effect from the traditional center of the US steel industry in Pittsburgh.
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