It’s a buyer’s market in Dickinson, N.D. For most of the past decade, North Dakota has been the economic envy of every state in America. It posted the lowest jobless rate, the highest increase in personal income, and the fastest-growing population—all thanks to an historic oil boom that vaulted it past Alaska to become the country’s second-largest producer after Texas. Now, amid the worst bust in a generation, North Dakota’s economy is shrinking, employment is falling fast, and the state is imposing the deepest spending cuts in its history to help plug a $1 billion budget deficit. “Quite simply, the North Dakota economy has been devastated by the dramatic drop in oil prices,” says Karl Kuykendall, an economist at the market research and energy consulting firm IHS. With crude prices at 13-year lows, Republican Governor Jack Dalrymple on Feb. 1 ordered 73 state agencies to make 4 percent across-the-board […]