|
January 2005
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Houston Branch
The New Metropolitan
Area: Welcome to Houston–Baytown–Sugar Land
Houston occasionally has been
called the blob that ate southeast Texas. This image
does not apply to the city of Houston (largely confined
to Harris County) but to the spread of population into
neighboring counties. Houston and the surrounding web
of smaller cities, towns and suburbs have been slowly
knit together by urbanization to form what is commonly
referred to as a metropolitan area. Houston becomes
a common identifying feature for those living in the
area, even for those living in the remote suburbs.
This concept of a metropolitan
area has been formally defined and redefined by government
statisticians since they first tackled the issue in
1949. Major reviews were undertaken in 1959, 1983, 1990
and 2000 to ensure the relevance and usefulness of the
metro area concept for government statistical collection.
The result has been a changing alphabet soup of MAs,
SMAs, MSAs, SMSAs, PMSAs and CMSAs, with the M always
standing for metropolitan and the A for area. The latest
rules for defining metropolitan areas from the 2000
review were implemented in 2003 by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB), bringing us a newly defined list of
“core-based statistical areas.” Under these
definitions, a substantial departure from past practice,
we now have a new Houston–Baytown–Sugar
Land (H-B-S) metropolitan area.[1]
Table 1 compares the 2000 population
of the city of Houston and the new metropolitan area.
In 1970, Houston made up 56.8 percent of the population
of the 10 counties in the newly defined H-B-S metro
area; this fell below 50 percent in the early 1980s
and was only 41.2 percent in 2000. As the growth rates
in Table 1 indicate, among the surrounding counties,
only Galveston County grew more slowly than the city
of Houston from 1970 through 2000. Fort Bend (578.6
percent) and Montgomery (495 percent) counties led this
growth, and the suburban parts of Harris County lying
outside the city of Houston grew 207 percent over the
period.
| Table 1 |
| Population and Growth, City of
Houston and Surrounding Counties, 1970 – 2000 |
| |
2000
population |
Percent
growth 1970–2000 |
Date
joined Houston MSA |
| City of Houston |
1,953,631 |
58.5 |
— |
| Houston–Baytown–Sugar
Land Metropolitan Area |
4,741,677 |
118.4 |
— |
| Austin County |
23,590 |
71.5 |
2003 |
| Brazoria County |
241,767 |
125.6 |
1971* |
| Chambers County |
26,301 |
118.2 |
1993 |
| Fort Bend County |
354,452 |
578.6 |
1971 |
| Galveston County |
250,158 |
46.9 |
1983* |
| Harris County |
3,400,578 |
99.8 |
1950 |
| Liberty County |
70,154 |
111.4 |
1971 |
| Montgomery County |
293,768 |
495.0 |
1971 |
| San Jacinto County |
22,246 |
233.2 |
2003 |
| Waller County |
32,663 |
128.3 |
1973 |
|
| * Galveston was a separate
metropolitan area from Houston from 1950 to 2003
but was made part of the Houston–Galveston–Brazoria
Consolidated MSA (CMSA) in a 1983 redefinition of
metro areas to match new 1980 standards.Brazoria
was part of the Houston metro area from 1971 to
1983, then broken out as a separate metro area from
1983 to 2003. Like Galveston, it was part of the
CMSA during 1983–2003. |
| SOURCES: Census Bureau; Bureau
of Economic Analysis. |
The dates in Table 1 show when
the OMB added new counties to the Houston metropolitan
area. From 1950 to 1971, the metropolitan area was only
Harris County. Brazoria, Fort Bend, Liberty and Montgomery
were added in 1971. As the map in Figure 1 illustrates,
the process has been one of slowly completing the ring
that encircles Harris County, finally including Chambers
County in 1993. The latest changes to the Houston metro
area include two additions from a second, outer ring
of counties that share no border with Harris County—Austin
and San Jacinto.

The most recent additions to the
new H-B-S metropolitan area also include Brazoria and
Galveston counties, previously stand-alone metro areas.
Both were primary metropolitan statistical areas under
1983 definitions but were also part of the Houston–Galveston–Brazoria
consolidated metropolitan statistical area. Under the
2003 redefinition, Brazoria and Galveston counties lose
all status as separate metro areas and are now absorbed
into the H-B-S metro area.
The pattern of a slow spread outward
from the center of the Houston metro area, based on
more rapid growth along an edge that now reaches into
the second ring of surrounding counties, indeed raises
the image of a countryside overtaken by a spreading
blob or stain. Only Hardin, Jefferson and Orange counties,
which currently make up the Beaumont–Port Arthur
metro area, stand in the way of a complete takeover
of deep southeast Texas.
To follow the latest economic
data releases, it is increasingly important to understand
the new metro area definitions. The Bureau of Economic
Analysis is already using the new definitions for its
local area personal income series. The Bureau of Labor
Statistics will switch to the new definitions in early
2005 for local nonagricultural employment reports and
local unemployment releases.
The rest of this article is a
look at the OMB’s new rules used to define metropolitan
statistical areas (MSAs). More transparent than in the
past, the rules for choosing central counties and adding
outlying counties are now more mechanical and easier
to understand. We can also explain why Brazoria and
Galveston are absorbed into the H-B-S metro area, while
Beaumont–Port Arthur continues to stand alone.[2]
New Rules, Big Changes
The new metropolitan area
definition brings substantial change to the list of
the nation’s largest places. For the United States,
about four out of five of the largest 100 metro areas
have been redefined. The largest metro area is now New
York (18.3 million population), replacing Los Angeles
(12.4 million) under the new definition. Chicago (9.1
million), Philadelphia (5.7 million) and Dallas–Fort
Worth (5.2 million) follow. Under the previous standards,
848 metro counties in 2000 accounted for 80.4 percent
of the U.S. population and about 20 percent of land
area. The new definitions contain 1,089 counties, 82.6
percent of the population and 25.3 percent of land area.[3]
Table 2 lists the six largest
metropolitan areas in Texas in 2000 and shows their
population and rank among the nation’s metro areas.
Texas has a net reduction of two metro areas. This results
from the consolidation of Brazoria and Galveston into
the H-B-S metro area, the consolidation of Dallas and
Fort Worth and the split of the Odessa–Midland
MSA into separate Odessa and Midland metro areas. The
newly consolidated Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington
metro area ranks number five in the nation, and H-B-S
ranks number eight. The smallest MSAs in Texas are Victoria
(111,663), San Angelo (110,781) and Sherman–Denison
(110,595).
| Table 2 |
| Largest Metropolitan Statistical
Areas in Texas, 2000 |
| |
Population
|
National
Rank |
| Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington |
5,161,544 |
5 |
| Houston–Baytown–Sugar
Land |
4,715,677 |
8 |
| San Antonio |
1,711,703 |
29 |
| Austin–Round Rock |
1,426,763 |
40 |
| El Paso |
679,622 |
69 |
| McAllen–Edinburg–Pharr |
569,463 |
81 |
|
| SOURCE: Census Bureau. |
The previous system of metropolitan
definitions had three tiers, reflecting a growing recognition
of a hierarchy of smaller cities and towns within some
large metropolitan areas. Under this system, there were
still large stand-alone MSAs, like San Antonio, for
example. In other cases, where two or more MSAs were
neighbors (primary MSAs) and a million or more residents
were involved, the MSAs could be combined into a consolidated
MSA or CMSA. The Houston–Galveston–Brazoria
CMSA and Dallas–Fort Worth CMSA were the two examples
in Texas.
Under the new core-based metro
definition, this hierarchy is still recognized, but
in a more limited fashion. Now the MSA must have 2.5
million residents for a division to exist, and the division
must reflect a significant level of economic independence
within the MSA. Only 11 metros in the United States
qualify for metropolitan divisions, and the only example
in Texas is the Dallas– Fort Worth–Arlington
MSA, divided into Dallas–Plano–Irving and
Fort Worth– Arlington. H-B-S is the only one of
the nation’s 10 largest metros without a metropolitan
division.
Rules-Based Metro Definition
A set of simple rules determines
the new core-based metro areas. The basic building block
of the metropolitan area is the county. A central county
or central group of counties is chosen, and outlying
counties are added based on strong economic ties to
the central counties. The economic ties are dictated
almost exclusively by regional commuting patterns. We
can use readily available data to illustrate how the
Houston–Baytown–Sugar Land metro area is
defined and constructed.
A central county in an MSA must
have a population of at least 50,000 and have at least
50 percent of its population living in urban areas of
10,000 or more. An urban area can be a census-defined
urbanized area or an urban cluster, and the existence
of a large urban area of 50,000 or more is the core
around which metropolitan areas are built. Urbanized
areas are defined by the Census Bureau as consisting
of a central place and an adjacent urban fringe that
together have a minimum population of 50,000 and that
meet specific population density requirements. [4] Urban
clusters are also densely settled areas with a population
of 2,500 to 49,999 and meeting the same density requirements
as the urbanized area. Table 3 shows the percentage
of urban residents in the 10 H-B-S metro counties who
are identified as living in urbanized areas and urban
clusters.
The division in Table 3 between
urbanized areas and clusters (at 2,500) does not match
well with the required metropolitan core definition
of 50 percent of the population residing in urban areas
of 10,000 or above, but it is the only summary data
available. However, these data are sufficient to classify
nine of 10 counties as either central or not. Harris,
Galveston, Fort Bend and Brazoria clearly qualify as
central counties with 50 percent or more of their population
in urbanized areas of 50,000 or more. Chambers, Waller,
Austin, Liberty and San Jacinto do not have 50 percent
of their population in all urban areas combined, meaning
they do not qualify. Montgomery is the only question
mark, with qualification depending on the population
of urban clusters over or under 10,000. A careful look
at census maps and the list of urban areas in Texas
indicates that Montgomery falls short of the 50 percent
standard and is not a central county.[5]
| Table 3 |
| Percentage of Urban Residents
in Counties of Houston–Baytown–Sugar Land Metropolitan
Area, 2000 |
| County |
Urbanized
area:
50,000+ population |
Urban
cluster:
2,500–49,999 population |
| Harris |
97.7 |
0.4 |
| Galveston |
91.6 |
0 |
| Fort Bend |
89.3 |
0.7 |
| Brazoria |
66.6 |
5.0 |
| Montgomery |
35.2 |
28.8 |
| Chambers |
14.3 |
21.5 |
| Waller |
2.1 |
34.4 |
| Austin |
0 |
31.1 |
| Liberty |
0 |
35.9 |
| San Jacinto |
0 |
0 |
|
| SOURCE: Census Bureau. |
The economic interaction among
the four central counties in H-B-S is dominated by Harris
County. Economic interaction is defined by the employment
interchange among central counties, and the interchange
between Harris and other central counties is illustrated
in Table 4. The top grouping in Table 4 shows the percentage
of employment in Brazoria, Fort Bend and Galveston counties
accounted for by local residents who commute to Harris
County to work. The middle grouping shows the percentage
of Brazoria, Fort Bend and Galveston employment held
by Harris County residents who commute to each county
to work. The sum of these two numbers at the bottom
of the table is the employment interchange, and counties
must be combined within a metro area anytime the employment
interchange exceeds 25 percent. [6] Clearly, all these
central counties are combined with Harris County. In
particular, Galveston and Brazoria no longer qualify
as separate metro areas under this rule and are combined
into H-B-S. No other pairing of central counties meets
the 25 percent standard.
| Table 4 |
| Interaction Between
Harris County and Other Central Counties in the
Metro Area |
| • Percentage
of jobs held by commuters from the central
county to Harris County |
| |
Brazoria
|
31.8% |
| |
Fort Bend |
58.8% |
| |
Galveston |
32.4% |
| • Percentage
of jobs held by commuters from Harris County |
| |
Brazoria |
7.3% |
| |
Fort Bend |
19.3% |
| |
Galveston |
11.5% |
| • Employment
interchange rate between Harris and other
central counties |
| |
Brazoria |
39.1% |
| |
Fort Bend |
78.1% |
| |
Galveston |
43.9% |
|
| SOURCES: Census
Bureau; Bureau of Economic Analysis. |
An outlying county is added to
the central counties only if (1) commuters from the
outlying county to central metro counties make up 25
percent or more of county employment or (2) commuters
from central metro counties account for 25 percent or
more of the outlying county employment. Table 5 displays
these figures for the six noncentral counties in the
H-B-S metro area, showing that they should be added
to the Houston metro area based on strong commuter ties.
In every case, central counties provide more than 25
percent of the jobs for outlying counties, and Harris
County is the dominant commuter destination in every
case.
| Table 5 |
| Interaction Between
Central and Outlying Counties of the Houston Metro
Area |
| • Percentage
of employment held by commuters from outlying
counties working in central counties (inbound
commuters) |
| |
Austin
|
26.5% |
| |
Chambers |
46.9% |
| |
Liberty |
40.9% |
| |
Montgomery |
39.9% |
| |
San Jacinto |
26.2% |
| |
Waller |
49.4% |
| • Percentage
of employment held by commuters from Harris
County |
| |
Austin |
22.6% |
| |
Chambers |
21.2% |
| |
Liberty |
5.2% |
| |
Montgomery |
14.1% |
| |
San Jacinto |
1.2% |
| |
Waller |
16.9% |
|
| SOURCES: Census
Bureau; Bureau of Economic Analysis. |
Using commuter patterns as the
glue to add outlying counties to central counties, the
H-B-S metro area is complete. How close is Washington
County, in the second ring around Harris County, to
joining the Houston metro area? In 2000, inbound commuters
from Washington County to H-B-S central counties accounted
for only 5.2 percent of local employment. Commuters
from central counties held only 2.1 percent of the jobs
in Washington County. The employment interchange rate
of 7.3 percent leaves it far short of being added to
the metro area at present. That doesn’t mean patterns
cannot change suddenly. Commuting from Galveston to
Harris County, for example, quadrupled between 1990
and 2000.
Both Liberty and Chambers counties
share a boundary with Jefferson County, the central
county for the Beaumont–Port Arthur metro area.
How do we know these counties belong to the Houston
metro area instead of Beaumont? The rule says that the
outlying county belongs to the metro area with the largest
employment interchange rate. Using the same calculations
as in Table 4, the Houston metro area wins hands down,
with an interchange rate of 61.1 percent for Chambers
County and 54.6 percent for Liberty. This compares with
Jefferson County interchange rates of only 4.5 percent
for Chambers and 2.2 percent for Liberty.
Why isn’t Jefferson County
consolidated into the Houston metro area, as were Galveston
and Brazoria? Because the employment interchange rate
between the central counties of the two metropolitan
areas remains very small at only 2.6 percent.
Principal cities in the H-B-S
metropolitan area are Houston, Baytown, Sugar Land and
Galveston. The name of a metro area includes up to three
principal cities, ranked in order of descending size.
The new naming convention replaces the single central
city used previously and recognizes the spread of metropolitan
areas to contain significant places beyond the largest
urbanized area.
Conclusion
The most striking element
of the change to the Houston metro area definition is
the consolidation of 10 counties into one region. The
previous six-county metro area now has the Galveston
and Brazoria metropolitan areas added, plus two new
outlying counties. The entire regional economy is solidly
linked together by commuting patterns, with Harris County
as the linchpin. Unlike the other top 10 metropolitan
areas in the United States, there are no metropolitan
divisions to indicate a degree of independence of any
one part of the region from another.
Care has to be taken when making
any statistical comparisons to past metro definitions
because reported data for the Houston metro area will
now change substantially. Aggregate data will shift
in level, primarily because populous Brazoria and Galveston
counties have been added. The inclusion of two prior
metropolitan areas can also influence ratios such as
growth rates, unemployment rates or the composition
of the region by race or ethnic group. The Houston metro
area shares this sweeping change in definition and practical
measurement with many of the nation’s metro areas.
—Robert W. Gilmer
 |
| About
the Author
Gilmer is a vice president
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
- “Standards for Defining Metropolitan
and Micropolitan Statistical Areas,”
Office of Management and Budget, Federal
Register, vol. 65, no. 249, December
27, 2000, pp. 82228–38, www.census.gov/population/www/estimates/masrp.html
[off-site].
- The OMB also has created a class of
micropolitan areas of 10,000–50,000
population, including two associated with
the Houston metro area—Bay City
in Matagorda County and Huntsville in
Walker County. The micropolitan area fills
a gap between metro and nonmetropolitan
counties. For a nationwide overview, see
“Micropolitan America: A Brand New
Geography,” by Robert E. Lang and
Dawn Dhavale, Census Note 05:01, Metropolitan
Institute at Virginia Tech, May 2004,
www.mi.vt.edu/uploads/micropolitan%20census%20note%2005%2001a.pdf
[off-site PDF].
- For a complete discussion of the effect
of new definitions on the U.S. metropolitan
hierarchy, see “Tracking Metropolitan
America into the 21st Century: A Field
Guide to the New Metropolitan and Micropolitan
Definitions,” by William H. Frey,
Jill H. Wilson, Alan Berube and Audrey
Singer, Metropolitan Policy Program, Brookings
Institution, November 2004, www.brookings.edu/dybdocroot/metro/pubs/20041115_metrodefinitions.pdf
[off-site PDF].
- Also counted are groups of at least
5,000 that extend into the county from
an urbanized area in an adjacent county,
if the entire urban area has at least
10,000 population.
- The only urbanized area in Montgomery
County is The Woodlands (population 89,445),
and the only urban clusters are Conroe
(41,404) and Willis (5,309). Even allowing
for some spillover from the city of Tomball
into Montgomery County, it remains well
short of the required 50 percent living
in urban areas of 10,000 or more.
- If the employment interchange reaches
15 percent but is less than 25 percent,
a combination of core-based statistical
areas can occur if public opinion prefers
the combination. Public opinion is defined
as that opinion expressed to the OMB by
the appropriate congressional delegation.
|
 |
|
Houston Beige
Book
January 2005
Houston enters the new year on
two years of solid growth. The local purchasing managers
index indicates growth for 24 months and very strong
growth throughout 2004. Moderate job growth is still
the disappointing aspect of the local expansion: 1.5
percent for the Houston metro area over the past 12
months and close to 2 percent for Brazoria and Galveston
counties—which both join the Houston metro area
with the release of January 2005 data.
Retail Sales
Mixed reports from local
retailers indicate sales were flat to slightly down
over the holidays, but once all the gift cards are cashed,
the holidays may end flat to slightly up. High-end retailers
all did well, while department store sales were softer
than expected until the week after Christmas. Discounters
were slow early in the holiday season but finished strong.
For small independents, it was a difficult holiday season.
Real Estate
Existing home sales in November
2004 were 20 percent higher than November 2003, hitting
record levels for the year even before December sales
were counted. New home sales were not far behind, up
15 percent in the third quarter compared with the prior
year.
The rest of the local real estate
market is mixed entering the new year. Apartments are
looking at lower occupancy and flat rents, with a wave
of new products coming onto the market in 2005. The
office market is down from a year ago, but a third-quarter
turnup in occupancy may indicate it has bottomed out
and is ready to improve.
Crude and Oil Products
The price of crude oil fell
from $49 per barrel in mid-November and wavered between
$41 and $45 through December. U.S. crude inventories
recovered, moving above the five-year average in December.
In response to rising inventories, OPEC announced a
1 million barrel per day cut in production, beginning
Jan. 1.
Heating oil has been the key factor
driving oil markets. Imports have been limited by tight
markets in Europe, operating problems in Venezuela and
high tanker rates that have limited arbitrage opportunities.
Low inventories and forecasts of cold weather kept the
price of heating oil high and volatile through early
December, when continued warm weather began to drag
both crude and heating oil prices down.
Refiner profit margins were very
good as heating oil prices peaked but have weakened
slowly as heating oil and crude prices have fallen together.
Refiners on the Gulf Coast operated at high capacity
utilization, with post-hurricane oil-supply problems
in the Gulf of Mexico largely fixed and the Gulf again
providing ample supplies of sweet crude.
Natural Gas
As with heating oil, a lack
of winter weather was also the major factor driving
natural gas markets. The forecast of a cold winter kept
near-term futures prices above $7 per thousand cubic
feet in November, but by early January they had slipped
under $6 as weather stayed warm.
Chemicals
Chemical producers continued
to report very strong domestic and export demand, with
record exports for some products helped by the high
price of gas relative to crude oil. Ethylene and all
the olefin products reported strong demand, good pricing
and solid profit margins. A major new polyvinyl chloride
and chlor-alkali complex has been announced, the first
major petrochemical facility on the Gulf Coast since
the late 1990s.
Oil Services and Machinery
Oil services have seen a
stable domestic rig count and an increase in drilling
in the Gulf of Mexico. The increased Gulf activity is
oil-directed, deep-water drilling. Activity is still
depressed in shallow waters. Expectations are for a
5 to 10 percent increase in drilling expenditures in
2005, a significant improvement.
| About
Houston Business
For more information
or copies of this publication, contact Bill
Gilmer at (713) 652-1546 or bill.gilmer@dal.frb.org,
or write to Bill Gilmer, Houston Branch,
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, P.O. Box
2578, Houston, Texas 77252. This publication
is available on the Internet at www.dallasfed.org.
The views expressed
are those of the authors and do not necessarily
reflect the positions of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System. |
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