|
July 2005
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Houston Branch
Personal Income in
the Texas Recession
Both the Texas and U.S. economies
slipped into recession in March 2001, but the Texas
recession was deeper and much longer. The nation saw
a 1.5 percent decline in the U.S. coincident indicators
of economic activity before recovery began in November
2001. In Texas, according to similar business-cycle
indicators, the economy declined 2.8 percent before
growth resumed in July 2003.
Oil, the technology bust and the
9/11 terrorist attacks of 2001 combined to prolong the
recession in Texas, especially in the Texas Triangle
cities of Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston and San
Antonio. Table 1 compares the performance of these major
metro areas with that of the United States and all of
Texas. The high-tech cities of Austin and Dallas experienced
the largest declines, according to these business-cycle
indexes, falling 14.4 and 13.1 percent, respectively.
Houston’s economy, despite a sharp downturn and
slow recovery in the oil sector, did not decline but
remained stagnant, with no growth for more than two
and a half years. San Antonio fell only 1.5 percent;
it was the last into recession and the first out. Houston
and Dallas were probably disproportionately hurt by
the 9/11 attacks, as both cities are home to major airlines.
| Table 1 |
| Texas Recession Compared with
United States: Business-Cycle Indexes |
| |
Peak |
|
Trough |
|
Percent
Decline |
|
Growth
since
trough |
|
Date |
|
Index |
|
Date |
|
Index |
|
| Austin |
Nov.
2000 |
|
384.9 |
|
Aug.
2003 |
|
329.6 |
|
–14.4 |
|
5.6 |
| Dallas |
Dec.
2000 |
|
206.3 |
|
Jul.
2003 |
|
179.3 |
|
–13.1 |
|
3.0 |
| Fort Worth |
Dec.
2000 |
|
218.8 |
|
Jun.
2003 |
|
211.5 |
|
–3.3 |
|
3.4 |
| Houston |
Apr.
2001 |
|
206.8 |
|
Nov.
2003 |
|
207.6 |
|
– |
|
4.7 |
| San Antonio |
Jun.
2001 |
|
212.7 |
|
Apr.
2003 |
|
209.5 |
|
–1.5 |
|
3.5 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Texas |
Mar.
2001 |
|
163.3 |
|
Jul.
2003 |
|
158.8 |
|
–2.8 |
|
3.5 |
| UnitedStates |
Mar.
2001 |
|
115.6 |
|
Nov.
2001 |
|
113.9 |
|
–1.5 |
|
4.7 |
|
| Note: Growth since trough is
measured from trough date to March 2005. |
| Sources: Texas state and metro
data from www.dallasfed.org; U.S. data from the
Conference Board. |
This article is a brief look at
another data series that describes the Texas recession.
Personal income is reported only annually and is delivered
with a two-year lag for major metro areas, but it is
still an important data series. There are no published
data for metropolitan gross product, and personal income
is the broadest measure of local economic activity available.
Personal income made up 78.8 percent of Texas gross
product in 2003, for example. Further, per capita personal
income is a widely watched indicator of the local standard
of living. Improvement in per capita income is generally
seen as an improvement in local welfare; if city A has
a per capita income higher than city B, it is often
assumed that A is better off than B.
The Texas recession appears starkly
in personal income data recently released for 2001–03,
offering another perspective on the pace, depth and
geography of the downturn. The data show a recession
driven mainly by decline in the Texas Triangle cities—the
heart of the Texas economy and home to 62.7 percent
of the state’s population in 2003, 66.1 percent
of employment and 71.1 percent of personal income.
Per Capita Income
Real per capita income in
the United States, Texas and the Triangle cities is
shown at the top of Table 2. The bottom of the table
gives per capita income as a percentage of U.S. income.
Texas’ per capita income in 2001 was 95 percent
of U.S. income; the Texas Triangle cities had a combined
income level well above the state and nation (109.8
percent), led by Houston (116.1 percent) and Dallas–Fort
Worth (112.2 percent).
| Table 2 |
| Real Per Capita Income in Texas
and United States, 1969–2003 |
| |
1969 |
|
1979 |
|
1989 |
|
2001 |
|
2003 |
|
Per
capita income (dollars) |
| Austin |
12,627 |
|
17,576 |
|
21,512 |
|
31,547 |
|
29,509 |
| Dallas–Fort Worth |
16,155 |
|
21,471 |
|
25,565 |
|
33,595 |
|
32,025 |
| Houston |
15,082 |
|
23,041 |
|
24,482 |
|
34,761 |
|
32,772 |
| San Antonio |
12,433 |
|
16,184 |
|
19,841 |
|
26,489 |
|
25,951 |
| Texas Triangle |
14,922 |
|
21,020 |
|
24,002 |
|
32,882 |
|
31,252 |
| Texas |
13,308 |
|
18,787 |
|
21,192 |
|
28,448 |
|
27,555 |
| United States |
15,189 |
|
19,435 |
|
24,061 |
|
29,948 |
|
29,828 |
| |
Percent
of U.S. income |
| Austin |
83.1 |
|
90.4 |
|
89.4 |
|
105.3 |
|
98.9 |
| Dallas–Fort Worth |
106.4 |
|
110.5 |
|
106.3 |
|
112.2 |
|
107.4 |
| Houston |
99.3 |
|
118.6 |
|
101.7 |
|
116.1 |
|
109.9 |
| San Antonio |
81.9 |
|
83.3 |
|
82.5 |
|
88.5 |
|
87.0 |
| Texas Triangle |
98.2 |
|
108.2 |
|
99.8 |
|
109.8 |
|
104.8 |
| Texas |
87.6 |
|
96.7 |
|
88.1 |
|
95.0 |
|
92.4 |
| United States |
100.0 |
|
100.0 |
|
100.0 |
|
100.0 |
|
100.0 |
|
| Note: Per capita income in
constant 2000 dollars. |
| Sources: Bureau of Economic
Analysis; authors’ calculations. |
Economic theory predicts that
regions poorer than the national average—like
Texas—should make long-term gains in per capita
income and converge toward the national norm. Except
for the oil bust period of the 1980s, such gains are
apparent in Table 2 for Texas from 1969 to 2001. The
years selected for the table are peak years in the business
cycle except 2003, which was added to eliminate the
effects of cyclical events. The period 2001–03
is different precisely because 2003 shows the effect
of recession in Texas.
The largest declines in per capita
income from 2001 to 2003 were in Austin ($2,038), Houston
($1,989) and Dallas–Fort Worth ($1,570), while
San Antonio fell only $538. The decline in the Texas
Triangle cities (an average of $1,630) was almost twice
that of the state ($893). U.S. per capita income fell
only $120 in this period, resulting in a significant
decline in the welfare of Texas and its cities relative
to the United States. We see a decline of 2.6 percent
in Texas per capita income relative to the nation and
5 percent for the combined Triangle cities.
Sources of Income
Sources of personal income
are divided into four major components (Table 3).
Compensation is payments of wages, salaries and employer-paid
benefits, plus the income of self-employed proprietors
and partners. Property income is rent, interest and
profits of employed capital. Transfers are unearned
income such as pensions, income support payments, or
Medicare and Medicaid payments. Transfers are measured
net of employee and employer payments for social insurance.
The “Other” category is a residence adjustment,
moving personal income from place of work to place of
residence if they differ.
| Table 3 |
| Personal Income by Source, 2003
(Percent share) |
| |
|
|
Compen-
sation |
|
Property |
|
Transfers |
|
Other |
| Austin |
100 |
|
88.1 |
|
13.7 |
|
–0.4 |
|
–1.5 |
| Dallas–Fort Worth |
100 |
|
89.9 |
|
11.6 |
|
–0.1 |
|
–1.5 |
| Houston |
100 |
|
88.3 |
|
11.5 |
|
0.9 |
|
–.8 |
| San Antonio |
100 |
|
78.6 |
|
14.1 |
|
6.8 |
|
0.5 |
| Texas Triangle |
100 |
|
87.9 |
|
12.0 |
|
1.0 |
|
–1.0 |
| Texas |
100 |
|
82.6 |
|
13.0 |
|
4.6 |
|
–.2 |
| United States |
100 |
|
77.7 |
|
16.1 |
|
6.2 |
|
0 |
|
| Note: Differences due to rounding
error. |
| Sources: Bureau of Economic
Analysis; authors’ calculations. |
As a share of personal income,
compensation dominates nationally and by an even larger
margin in Texas. In 2003, compensation was 77.7 percent
of personal income in the United States, 82.6 percent
in Texas and 87.9 percent in the Triangle cities. Property
income and transfers both play a larger role in the
United States than in Texas and a bigger role in Texas
than in the Triangle cities.
Not surprisingly, property income
fell during the recession, along with profits and interest
rates. Property income’s share of personal income
declined 0.8 percentage points in Texas Triangle cities,
1.1 percentage points in Texas and 1.8 percentage points
in the United States. At the same time, transfers rose
as automatic stabilizers, such as unemployment insurance
and welfare payments, kicked in. Transfers gained 1
percentage point in Triangle cities, 1.2 in Texas and
0.9 in the nation.
The major factor in explaining
the decline in Texas per capita income is compensation.
We can divide compensation per capita (C/P)
into two parts: compensation per worker (C/E)
and the number of employed workers in the population
(E/P).
C/P = (C/E)
(E/P)
Table 4 shows the percentage changes
in these measures from 2001 to 2003. C/E is
a measure of wage growth, and E/P is a measure
of the job market’s strength.
| Table 4 |
| Compensation Per Capita, 2001–03
(Percent change) |
|
C/P |
C/E |
E/P |
| Austin |
–7.0 |
–1.8 |
–5.2 |
| Dallas–Fort Worth |
–4.7 |
1.4 |
–6.1 |
| Houston |
–6.5 |
–2.5 |
–4.0 |
| San Antonio |
–1.1 |
1.3 |
–2.4 |
| Texas Triangle |
–5.3 |
–0.4 |
–4.8 |
| Texas |
–3.2 |
0.1 |
–3.3 |
| United States |
0.6 |
2.5 |
–1.9 |
|
| Note: C/P = compensation
per capita, C/E = compensation per employed
worker, E/P = employed workers in the population;
differences due to rounding error. |
| Sources: Bureau of Economic
Analysis; authors’ calculations. |
The declines in C/P were
significantly greater in the Texas Triangle cities than
in the state as a whole (–5.3 versus –3.2
percent), while the United States actually increased
0.6 percent from 2001 to 2003. Austin (–7 percent)
and Houston (–6.5 percent) led the metropolitan
declines.
Compensation per employee was
relatively stable in Texas and the Texas Triangle, while
it jumped 2.5 percent in the United States. Clearly,
the declines in E/P dominated the fall in per
capita compensation. The prolonged jobless recovery
in the nation only pulled down the E/P ratio
by 1.9 percent, while the comparable figure for Texas
was 3.3 percent and for the Triangle cities, 4.8 percent.
Table 5 shows, however, that it
was not just a weak job market that pulled down per
capita compensation but a combination of weak job growth
and rapid population growth. Texas population continued
to grow at historic rates, much faster than the U.S.
rate despite the two-plus years of recession. While
Texas job growth was only 0.3 percent from 2001 to 2003,
U.S. employment grew even more slowly, at 0.1 percent.
At the same time, population growth in Texas was 3.6
percent, versus 2 percent in the United States. In the
Texas Triangle, job growth was –0.4 percent and
population growth 4.4 percent.
| Table 5 |
| Growth of Employment and Population,
2001–03 (Percent change) |
|
Employment |
Population |
E/P |
| Austin |
–0.9 |
4.3 |
–5.2 |
| Dallas–Fort Worth |
–1.8 |
4.4 |
–6.1 |
| Houston |
0.6 |
4.7 |
–4.0 |
| San Antonio |
1.6 |
4.0 |
–2.4 |
| Texas Triangle |
–0.4 |
4.4 |
–4.8 |
| Texas |
0.3 |
3.6 |
–3.3 |
| United States |
0.1 |
2.0 |
–1.9 |
|
| Note: Differences due to rounding
error. |
| Sources: Bureau of Economic
Analysis; authors’ calculations. |
Conclusion
Recently released data on
state and metropolitan personal income provide a new
look at the Texas recession of 2001–03. The data
provide the most comprehensive measure of the recession
available at the metro level and our best measure of
how the welfare of Texas cities was affected by the
decline.
The recession was strongly centered
in the large cities of the Texas Triangle, probably
driven by downturns in oil and high tech and the aftermath
of 9/11. Austin and Houston suffered the largest declines
in income per capita. Weak wage growth was a factor
setting Texas apart from the United States, but a weak
job market probably played the major role in pulling
income down. The Texas job situation was made significantly
worse by continued strong population growth across the
state despite the ongoing recession.
| — |
Robert W. Gilmer |
| |
Briana Wilsey |
| About
the Authors
Gilmer is a vice president
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Wilsey
will be a student at the University of Pennsylvania
in the fall. |
|
Houston Beige
Book
July 2005
A revised unemployment rate of
5.5 percent was finally announced for Houston, after
a two-month delay to correct errors in local area statistics.
The rate is comparable with the 5.3 percent for Texas.
Combined with solid job growth, a Purchasing Managers
Index over 60 and continued strength in home sales,
economic statistics all point to continued strength
in the local economy.
Retail and Auto Sales
Retailers were generally
optimistic, as most were reporting they were ahead of
plan and expecting good times to continue. Discounters
continue to report solid sales, while department stores
were a mixed bag of soft to gangbuster results. Furniture
stores continue to report trouble moving big-ticket
items. The coming sales tax holiday is seen as a potential
extra boost to already solid results.
Auto dealers had another good
month in May, putting 2005 sales for the first five
months up 7.8 percent over the same period last year.
The forced purchase of 75,000 new cars because of Tropical
Storm Allison in 2002 may have cut into auto purchases
that would have occurred in 2003 and 2004, making both
those years abnormally weak. Recent strength may mark
a return to a more normal pattern of auto sales.
Crude Oil and Natural Gas
Crude oil prices had fallen
to $46–$47 per barrel in mid- May on the basis
of slower economic growth and rising inventories. Since
that time, they have steadily strengthened, rising above
$60 per barrel by late June. Crude prices have been
driven by a number of factors: stronger economic growth,
very strong demand for both diesel fuel and gasoline
that continues despite higher prices, fear of supply
disruptions in the refinery system, concern about the
outcome of the Iranian elections and an early start
to the hurricane season—seen as a threat to refineries,
producing platforms and transportation infrastructure.
Natural gas prices have risen
along with crude prices, helped by warmer-than-normal
temperatures in the South. Supplies are ample. Despite
high temperatures, natural gas inventories remain 12
percent above normal for this time of year.
Refining and Oil Products
Refinery margins on the Gulf
Coast remained very strong throughout June, about the
same as May and more than $3.50 per barrel higher than
June 2004. Refinery capacity utilization on the Gulf
Coast averaged rates near 98 percent, higher than the
U.S. rate.
Distillate prices normally take
a back seat to gasoline prices this time of year. However,
extremely strong demand for diesel at home and in Europe
raised concern about the refinery system’s ability
to build inventories for next winter. Distillate inventories
did begin to rise in June, however, growing 8.6 percent
between June 27 and July 1.
Chemicals
Chemical producers continued
to struggle through a soft patch of weak demand for
product, which has resulted in higher inventories and
lower prices. Prices have declined for a variety of
basic chemical and plastics products: ethylene, PET
bottle resin, polystyrene, ethylene, polyethylene, polypropylene,
ethylene glycol and benzene. A drop in Asian demand
was blamed for the slowdown. In late June, there were
signs that spot prices were generally stabilizing, and
respondents in both the olefins and vinyl chains reported
improvements in orders.
Oil Services and Machinery
The domestic rig count continued
to rise, adding 40 rigs between late May and early July
in the United States and eight rigs in Texas. Drilling
in the Gulf of Mexico improved by 10 rigs but still
remains depressed compared with the 2001 peak.
Oil service companies continue
to report robust demand, limited capacity and strong
pricing power. Demand for drilling services is high
and continues to increase, with operators indicating
growing plans for domestic and international drilling.
Service companies are expressing more willingness to
expand capacity, given current pricing, recent experience
in turning down work and the potential durability of
this drilling cycle.
| 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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