|
Issue 1, January/February 2006
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Texas Economy Shifts into Higher
Gear
By Fiona Sigalla
After several years of barely
keeping up with the nation as a whole, the Texas economy
showed signs of renewed strength in 2005. While Texas
hasn’t yet kicked into overdrive, it did indeed
enter the new year once again growing faster than the
U.S. average.
Last year saw the most robust
job growth since 2000. Texas’ economy gained momentum
through its traditional advantages—a resilient
energy industry, a favorable business climate, a low
cost of living and relatively inexpensive real estate.
Even manufacturing managed to add jobs in 2005, buoyed
by healthy global demand for Texas products.
Total employment grew by roughly
2 percent in 2005, slightly better than the rest of
the nation (Chart 1). Income data confirm that
Texas’ economy has shifted from losing ground
to gaining it. After falling from 96 percent of the
U.S. average in early 2001 to 93 percent at the end
of 2004, real per capita personal income rebounded to
94 percent in last year’s third quarter.

Regaining its edge over the nation
doesn’t mean Texas is experiencing a 1990s-style
boom. Since the start of the U.S. and Texas recessions
in 2001, job growth has been below the state’s
long-run average of about 3 percent. Among the factors
that have been muting the expansion are structural changes
in the high-tech sector, a lingering overhang of office
space and a scuffle in the beleaguered airline industry.
Consumer spending was dampened by real wage cuts in
both the high-tech and airline industries.
The Dallas Fed’s latest
forecast indicates that the Texas economy should expand
at a slightly faster pace in 2006, with job growth projected
at around 2.8 percent. Energy will remain an asset because
of heavy demand for drilling, increasing business for
energy services and high royalty payments for landowners.
The state’s technology and manufacturing firms
should continue to bounce back from their recessionary
depths. Some construction activity might experience
a slight slowdown, but rebuilding from Hurricanes Rita
and Katrina should help keep the industry relatively
strong. The expansion will be dampened somewhat by energy
costs and interest rates that are higher than a year
ago.
Texas boasts a friendly business
climate, where companies can grow quickly in good times.
They find a ready supply of potential workers in a state
with rapid immigration, a young labor force and a low
cost of living. With abundant vacant land, few regulations
and low construction costs, building activity responds
faster to demand in Texas than in most other parts of
the country.
In large measure because of these
advantages, Texas’ share of U.S. payroll employment
grew across all industries throughout the 1990s (Chart
2). Expansion of technology firms during the late
1990s led to construction of factories, warehouses,
offices and homes. Real estate investment during the
high-tech boom probably reflected the expectation that
the Texas economy would continue to grow faster than
the nation’s.

But Texas’ ability to sustain
fast-growing industries leaves it vulnerable in downswings.
High-tech industries flourished in the 1990s. When the
bust came in 2000, it hit the state harder than the
rest of the country. Texas suffered massive layoffs,
and office vacancies rose to among the nation’s
highest. From 2001 through 2004, as the U.S. economy
recovered from recession, most sectors of the Texas
economy struggled to regain their historical growth
rates. Services and manufacturing, for example, barely
managed to maintain their share of national employment.
Sectors that moved against this trend included construction,
whose share of national employment dropped between 2002
and 2004, and energy, which added jobs in Texas at a
faster pace than the rest of the country.
In 2005, the patterns began to
shift. Construction, slower to reignite after the 2001
recession, regained enough strength to stop losing ground.
High oil and natural gas prices kept the energy sector
humming last year, and manufacturing gave an added boost
to the Texas expansion. These three industries—construction,
energy and manufacturing—help explain why Texas
did better last year. They also brighten the state’s
outlook for 2006.
Construction Revival Hits Home
For the nation, the post-recession
revival of construction employment started in early
2003 (Chart 3). For Texas, the turning point
didn’t come for another 18 months. Since mid-2004,
the growth rate of Texas construction jobs has roughly
matched the United States as a whole.

The 2001–04 decline in construction
jobs largely reflected the real estate glut the boom
years left behind. Weakness pervaded nonresidential
construction, particularly commercial building, as well
as specialty trades, such as roofers, electricians and
other contract workers. By contrast, residential construction
continued strong. Texas added workers to support this
market segment at a faster pace than did the U.S. during
much of the past few years.
In 2005, the improvement in construction
came from apartment building and a surge in homebuilding,
including condominiums. Heavy construction of highways,
roads, bridges and pipelines also picked up strongly
last year, and at a faster pace than in the rest of
the country. Commercial construction experienced an
uptick, although activity remains relatively weak.
Office vacancy rates have declined
in recent years as commercial building slumbered and
demand revived. Even so, downtown Austin remains third
among U.S. cities in office vacancies; Dallas–Fort
Worth ranks fourth. Houston fared better than Austin
or Dallas, although the city’s office vacancy
rate still hovers above the national average. Houston
was not hurt as much by the high-tech downturn because
the city has a smaller concentration of those firms
than the state’s other two major metropolitan
areas. Houston also benefits from being the nexus of
the prosperous energy industry. Still, the city’s
office markets did not escape the recent recession unscathed.
The Enron collapse left Houston with additional vacant
high-rise office space to commemorate the birth of Sarbanes-Oxley.
Construction is likely to continue
boosting economic growth in 2006, although some slowing
could occur as supply surpasses demand for some types
of properties. For several months, Dallas Fed real estate
contacts have expressed concern about speculative construction
in some Texas markets for condominiums, apartments and
office space. The influx of hurricane evacuees has helped
absorb some of the excess apartment supply, but uncertainty
remains about whether the newcomers will settle in Texas
or return to their home states.
Fewer worries afflict the homebuilding
segment. Months in inventory remains relatively low
in Texas—for most markets dipping in 2005 from
six months to five. What’s more, the Texas homebuilding
boom hasn’t been accompanied by the hefty price
appreciation that occurred in other parts of the country.
The state’s slower price increases don’t
signal slack demand; rather, they reflect the ability
to increase supply quickly in response to demand. In
contrast to other parts of the nation, vigorous building
has helped keep Texas real estate prices in check.
Texas’ weak home-price
appreciation may be a mixed blessing. Fears of an overpriced
housing market that could result in falling home prices
are muted in Texas, while they are palpable on parts
of the East and West coasts. On the other hand, the
state’s consumer spending probably has been subdued.
Without a substantial run-up in home prices, Texans
couldn’t extract home equity as readily as homeowners
in many other areas of the country. State homestead
and debtor-friendly laws also make it more difficult
for Texas bankers to offer the same kind of equity financing
available elsewhere.
The outlook should include a note
of caution about the possibility of slower growth in
homebuilding in 2006. Construction costs and interest
rates higher than a year ago could dampen demand. Because
home-price increases have been relatively tame, moreover,
Texas homeowners don’t have the equity cushion
enjoyed by much of the rest of the country.[1] Foreclosures
have been relatively high in the state. Any downturn
in home prices could be accompanied by financial strain.
Energy Profits from Higher Prices
For most states, rising energy
prices are bad news. Although oil and gas account for
much less of Texas’ economy than they did 20 years
ago, the stimulus of higher energy prices is still a
net positive for Texas.[2]
Most directly, they’re a
boost to the energy industry’s revenues and profits,
providing incentives to add jobs in oilfield services,
refining and related businesses. Texas, Louisiana and
the Gulf of Mexico account for 43 percent of the nation’s
oil and 41 percent of its natural gas reserves.[3] Refinery
output is also concentrated in the area, with Texas
and Louisiana home to just under half the country’s
refining capacity.
Texas’ energy industry ebbs
and flows with changes in oil and natural gas prices.
With relatively high-cost production in the state, drilling
in some areas becomes viable only when energy sells
at a premium. Such was the case in 2005.
Energy prices were elevated at
the start of the year, and they surged in mid-2005 as
roaring demand and dwindling inventories led to concerns
about the adequacy of supplies. Prices spiked even higher
after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita disabled production,
pipeline and refining facilities, some of which remained
out of service at year’s end.
Oil stayed above $50 per barrel
for much of the year, jumping briefly to nearly $70
a barrel for West Texas Intermediate crude. Natural
gas prices rose to nearly $15 per million Btu. Gasoline
at the pump spent most of the year well above $2 a gallon.
Drilling activity jumped in response
to higher prices, mostly exploring for natural gas.
The Texas rig count ended the year at 672, well above
the year-earlier level of 480 (Chart 4). Higher
energy prices and technological innovations make it
profitable to explore and drill in more difficult locations.[4]
Dramatic increases in activity sprouted in areas previously
considered impenetrable, generating productive new sources
of natural gas. Significant new drilling is now taking
place in East Texas, the Texas Panhandle and areas north
of Fort Worth.

Business leaders say energy activity
and employment would have increased even more except
for a shortage of equipment and trained workers. Activity
in and around the Gulf Coast was disrupted by hurricane
damage, which pushed facilities offline and forced workers
to focus on rebuilding rather than expanding.
Royalty payments to landowners
also gave the economy a boost. Texans receive larger
royalty checks when energy prices rise because the energy
extracted is more valuable. Higher energy prices also
generate additional royalty payments; higher prices
make it cost-effective to pursue ventures in new fields,
so more people receive checks.
Energy prices are expected to
drift lower in 2006 but are likely to remain high enough
to sustain industry expansion. Capacity constraints
and the hurricanes kept production from expanding as
fast as desired in 2005. Energy activity could be even
stronger in 2006, despite weaker prices.
Manufacturing Rallies on Export
Gains
On a national scale, manufacturing
has been one of the recovery’s most conspicuous
laggards. Texas is bucking the trend. Its traditional
advantages—a fast-growing labor force, low cost
of living and good business climate—have allowed
the state to acquire a growing share of U.S. manufacturing
output (Chart 5).

Overall, Texas manufacturers produced
$107 billion worth of manufactured goods in 2004, roughly
7.1 percent of the country’s output. The state
churns out nearly 30 percent of the nation’s petroleum
and coal products, 10 percent of its computer and electronics
products, and 10 percent of its nonmetallic mineral
products, such as brick, glass and cement.
Manufacturers have been adopting
productivity-enhancing technologies and relocating production
facilities to reduce costs. For some companies, the
lower-cost location is overseas. For others, Texas fits
the bill.
Newcomers are only part of the
good news for Texas manufacturing. State firms have
also shown they can be feisty global competitors. In
recent years, Texas has increased its share of U.S.
exports—from about 11 percent in 1997 to nearly
15 percent last year (Chart 6). The surge in
overseas sales allowed Texas to supplant California
as the nation’s top exporting state in 2002 (see
Spotlight on Texas Exports,
also in this issue). Nearly one quarter of U.S. exports
of petroleum and coal products comes from Texas. Texas
ships 22 percent of the nation’s exports of electrical
equipment and appliances, 18 percent of computer and
electronic components, and 17 percent of chemicals.

Texas goods are shipped to destinations
around the world, but the largest export market for
the state’s products is Mexico. Some of these
goods are consumed by our southern neighbor, but most
are used as inputs at manufacturing plants—called
maquiladoras—that assemble products and
then ship them back for sale in the United States.[5]
For example, the U.S. sends semiconductors and software
to Mexico for assembly into computers that are then
sold by U.S. vendors. Texas is a convenient location
for firms that ship parts to maquiladoras.
The recent upturn in Texas manufacturing
has been accompanied by a similar pickup in maquiladora
activity. Employment at maquiladoras dropped in early
2001 as recessions in the U.S. and Mexico dampened demand.
Maquiladoras began adding workers again in early 2004.
Production at maquiladoras has increased over the past
two years, helping boost Texas manufacturing.
Texas factories added jobs in
2005—nearly 6,000, or just less than 1 percent
through November—notable considering this sector
has been losing employment nationwide. State job growth
has been mostly at factories producing durable goods,
such as fabricated metals, machinery, semiconductors,
and communications and transportation equipment.
The state’s manufacturers
are expecting more of the same in 2006. The Dallas Fed’s
new Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey found solid optimism
at least through mid-2006. In December, two-thirds of
the respondents expected to raise output over the next
six months, compared with 8 percent anticipating cutbacks.
As for new hiring, 45 percent saw a potential to add
jobs by June, while 12 percent anticipated paring payrolls.
Texas Economy Gearing Up in
2006
State and regional economies
rarely move in tandem with the nation. At any time,
some areas are doing worse than average while others
are better. In 2005, Texas crossed the line from one
category to the other. As the Texas expansion picked
up steam, the state’s economy once again started
growing faster than the nation’s, although the
edge was slight. The drivers have been a thriving energy
industry, a surge in residential construction and a
pickup in Texas manufacturing. Texas is now more likely
to once again be an asset to U.S. economic growth, although
not at the magnitude it was in the 1970s and 1990s.
The state’s expansion appears
on solid ground for 2006. The Dallas Fed’s Texas
Leading Index rose sharply at the end of 2005 to its
highest reading since 2000. While partly the result
of a rebound from hurricane disruptions, the rise in
Texas’ leading indicators appears to be signaling
a sustainable pickup in economic activity. Average weekly
hours worked in manufacturing, for example, increased
in November to its highest reading since 2003. Initial
claims for unemployment insurance dropped to pre-recession
levels.
The tens of thousands of Louisiana
residents who have made the Lone Star State their home,
at least for now, are boosting economic activity. Construction
growth should remain strong, with perhaps a slight weakening,
in 2006. Manufacturing and service activity should strengthen
as energy prices come down, but the price declines aren’t
expected to be large enough to derail the state’s
energy industry. A healthy business climate will help
the state remain a formidable global competitor.
«Previous
article | Next Article»
 |
| About
the Authors
Sigalla is an economist
in the Research Department of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
The author thanks
Bill Gilmer, Keith Phillips, Frank Berger,
Mine Yücel, Anna Berman and Raghav
Virmani for help with this article.
- “Has
the Housing Boom Increased Mortgage Risk?”
by Jeffery W. Gunther and Robert R. Moore,
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Southwest
Economy, Issue 5, September/ October
2005.
- “Do
Higher Oil Prices Still Benefit Texas?”
by Stephen P. A. Brown and Mine Yücel,
in The Face of Texas: Jobs, People,
Business, Change, Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas, October 2005, pp. 33–36.
- Data are from the Energy Information
Administration for Dec. 31, 2004. For
more information, see
“Concentration of Energy Production
and Processing on the Gulf Coast,”
by Robert W. Gilmer, Carrie Ann Fossum
and Iram Siddik, Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas Houston Business, December
2005.
- For more detail, see “Texas
Drilling Directed Toward Unconventional
Natural Gas,” by Robert W. Gilmer,
Carrie Ann Fossum and Iram Siddik, Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas Houston Business,
June 2005.
- For more information about maquiladoras,
see “U.S.–Mexico
Trade: Are We Still Connected?”
by Jesus Cañas and Roberto Coronado,
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Business
Frontier, Issue 3, 2004.
|
| About
Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed
are those of the authors and should not
be attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited
and a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the
Public Affairs Department, Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas, P.O. Box 655906, Dallas,
TX 75265-5906, or by telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
|
|