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Issue 1, January/February 1999
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Texas Update and
Outlook
The Texas economy slowed dramatically
in 1998. Total nonfarm employment grew at only a 3.3-percent
annual rate in the first 11 months of the year, after very
strong 4.6-percent growth in 1997. Furthermore, as Chart 1
illustrates, Texas employment growth slowed throughout the
year. Total nonfarm employment grew at a 4.1-percent annual
rate in the first half of 1998, at a 2.6-percent annual rate
in the third quarter and at only a 2-percent annual rate in
the fourth quarter (October and November).
Although all major sectors of the economy
slowed from the torrid pace of 1997, weakness in the Texas
economy was confined generally to the mining, manufacturing
and agricultural sectors. Led by strong growth in business
services and transportation, service sector employment grew
at a 3.6-percent annual rate in 1998. Meanwhile, rising rents
and low vacancy and interest rates fueled a banner year for
the Texas construction industry. Office and apartment vacancy
rates in Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth and Houston are all lower
now than they were during the go-go days of the early 1980s.
Lower energy prices are the primary
reason for weakness in the mining sector. Oil prices declined
nearly 40 percent during 1998, while natural gas prices declined
25 percent. As Chart 2 illustrates, Texas drilling activity
declined with prices. Employment in oil and gas extraction
fell by 7,500 workers (5 percent), and the Texas rig count
fell by 162 rigs (44 percent).
Much of the weakness in the manufacturing
sector can be traced to economic weakness overseas. Texas
real exports have declined for three consecutive quarters
(Chart 3). In the first half of the year, modest increases
in exports to Canada and Mexico partially offset declining
exports to Asia and Latin America, but by the third quarter,
exports to Texas' NAFTA partners also had declined. Texas
exports are down especially sharply in energy products and
agricultural crops.
Low prices and weak export markets both
contributed to a bad year for Texas agriculture, but the primary
culprit was Mother Nature. Severe drought devastated crop
yields across the state and forced ranchers to liquidate their
herds.
Strong Economic Head Winds Should
Continue to Blow in 1999
Strong economic head winds will
slow Texas economic activity in 1999. In particular, the state's
economy will continue to face low oil prices, tight labor
markets and weakened trading partners.
Low Oil Prices. Industry
contacts report that energy producers are pulling back hard
in preparation for a prolonged period of low prices. The futures
market is forecasting a marked increase in oil prices by the
end of 1999. However, even if the price of West Texas Intermediate
crude returns to the $14 range, the price will still be below
the cost of production for some Texas firms, and the energy
industry should continue to shrink.
The merger mania that has taken hold
in the industry could also lead to substantial job cuts. For
example, the British Petroleum-Amoco merger is expected to
reduce worldwide employment in the two firms by 6,000 jobs,
many of which may be in Texas. Similarly, the proposed Exxon-Mobil
merger is expected to reduce worldwide employment in the two
firms by 9,000 jobs. However, Texas could actually gain jobs
if the merged firms consolidate into the region.
Tight Labor Markets. Unemployment
rates remain below the national average in many parts
of the
state (Table 1), and the national average is low enough to
be considered full employment by many analysts. In a full
employment environment, labor force growth limits employment
growth (see box entitled "Labor Market Tightness" in
the PDF),
and Texas will be hard pressed to generate labor force
growth
much in excess of 2 percent in 1999. Because labor markets
are much tighter in north and central Texas than they
are
along the Gulf Coast or the border, difficulties finding
workers are more likely to restrain growth in the Dallas/Fort
Worth
area than in Corpus Christi or El Paso.
Weakened Trading Partners.
None of Texas' major trading partners
is in particularly robust health, so export growth is likely
to be anemic in 1999. Mexico continues to post solid GDP numbers;
however, other economic data suggest weakness (Chart
4). Falling
oil prices are a significant drag on the Mexican economy and
have forced the Mexican government (which receives more than
a quarter of its revenues from oil) to adopt an austere budget
for 1999. The real peso has regained some of its recent losses
in purchasing power relative to the dollar, primarily because
Mexican inflation has risen sharply. The purchasing power
of the average Mexican consumer has probably not improved.
Texas retailers indicate that sales to Mexican nationals have
been disappointing.
Canadian purchasing power fell even
more than Mexican purchasing power in 1998 (Chart 5). Exports
to Canada (Texas' No. 2 trading partner) fell 6.6 percent
in third quarter 1998 and are unlikely to rebound much in
the near term. The sharpest declines in exports came in oil
and gas, furniture and primary metals.
Elsewhere, Japan continues to be mired
in recession, the Asian crisis countries (Indonesia, Malaysia,
Philippines, South Korea and Thailand) are at best bouncing
along the bottom, the European economies are expected to slow
and recent political events in Brazil and Venezuela have increased
concern about Latin America.
Outlook for 1999: Slower Growth but
No Recession
The construction industry should
continue to register solid growth in 1999. The industry weathered
a financing scare in fall 1998 that industry contacts view
as the pause that refreshes. Concerns about overbuilding have
eased somewhat, and builders who were cut off by the pullback
of real estate investment trusts (REITs) and insurance companies
are finding other, more conventional sources of finance. Housing
markets are generally tight, although Houston contacts report
that some buyers are backing out of contracts. Residential
rents are increasing at twice the rate of inflation and have
been rising faster in Texas than in the nation as a whole—two
factors that should fuel continued building activity in 1999.
There should also be a substantial increase in highway construction
in 1999.
High-tech manufacturing should contribute
more to the economy in 1999 than it did in 1998. The Semiconductor
Industry Association predicts that sales will grow 9 percent
in 1999, after shrinking nearly 11 percent in 1998.[1] Computer
industry contacts report that PC sales have increased. Continued
concerns about the Year 2000 problem may also foster some
increase in sales of computers and computer equipment in 1999
(although a 1999 sales binge could mean a hangover for the
computer industry in 2000).
Exports, agriculture and energy will
be a drag on the Texas economy, but are unlikely to completely
upset the economic apple cart. Texas is much less sensitive
to energy prices now than it was during the early 1980s
(see
box entitled "The New Texas Economy" in the PDF).
Resources that are freed up from these industries are likely
to be
snapped
up by other industries looking to expand, thereby easing
some of the problems created by tight labor markets.
Bottom Line. As long as the U.S. economy
continues to grow, the Texas economy should do likewise. We
expect that Texas employment will grow approximately 2 percent
in 1999, thereby registering the 11th consecutive year in
which Texas employment growth exceeds the national average.
— Lori L. Taylor, Stephen P. A.
Brown, Fiona Sigalla and Mine K. Yücel
| Note
- See Dean Takahashi (1998), "Chip Industry
Forecasts a Broad Recovery," Wall Street
Journal, November 12, A3.
|
|
The
Churn Among Firms: Recycling America's Corporate Elite
Nothing lasts forever. The maxim is
particularly apt when it comes to America's dynamic economy.
Each day brings something new. Companies expand into new markets,
and they downsize. They add new products and discontinue others.
In three short years, an enterprise like Amazon.com can go
from start-up to a market value of $17 billion—surpassing
even that of century-old Sears.[1] Boeing buys McDonnell Douglas;
Citicorp absorbs Travelers; Exxon merges with Mobil. These
events are only a sampling of the way our economy continually
shifts. Recent generations have witnessed mind-boggling transformations
in the way we work, what we consume and how we do business.
Change may be the only constant in our vibrant capitalist
system.
A few years ago, the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas' Annual Report focused on economic change.
An essay titled "The Churn: The Paradox of Progress"
examined the economic forces that continually roil labor markets.[2]
Jobs are created and destroyed as new ideas, new products,
new technologies, new markets and new forms of industrial
organization upset the status quo. The essay emphasized that
this relentless, unsettling mechanism—what economist
Joseph Schumpeter called "creative destruction"[3]—isn't
a curse on the capitalist system. To the contrary, it is the
way to economic progress and higher living standards.
Economic forces don't agitate only labor
markets, though. They also produce a corresponding "churn"
among employers. Companies, just like jobs, are in a constant
state of flux. Every day, new firms are born. Every day, some
enterprises gain sales and profits while others lose them.
Every day, companies merge, divest, downsize and go out of
business. As with the churn of employment, this process is
ultimately healthy for the economy.[4] It shifts resources
to more productive uses, and it rewards companies for giving
consumers better products, greater variety and lower prices.
The churn is most apparent among small
enterprises, which are often launched with great energy and
optimism but too little financing and experience. Some start-ups
do make it, but small businesses fail at a high rate.[5] This
sector of the economy would serve as a good illustration of
the churn at work, but data on small private companies are
sketchy. Larger, publicly held companies are only part of
the economy, but regular reports on their activities produce
a comprehensive and reliable picture of the shifting fortunes
of American business.
A series of five snapshots of the corporate
elite provides a long-term view of the churn among firms (Table
1). In the early years of this century, companies engaged
in the production of metals, oil, meatpacking and basic machinery
dominated the U.S. economy. They were, in their own ways,
the technology leaders of their day. They introduced new products
and new production methods and emerged as national suppliers
to an early industrial economy.
Although General Electric, AT&T
and the big oil companies have remained among the largest
U.S. industrial concerns decade after decade, newcomers are
always driving toward the top of the rankings. At the end
of World War II, the producers of everyday products—for
example, Coca-Cola and Kodak—made the top 20, evidence
the nation had begun its move from mass production to mass
consumption. In the past decade, such companies as Microsoft,
Intel and Cisco Systems have jumped into the top echelon,
testimony to the microchip's growing importance to the American
economy. The rankings of Merck, Pfizer, Bristol-Myers Squibb
and Eli Lilly reflect the advances in pharmaceuticals.
The churn is as relentless in the corporate
sector as it is in the labor market. Of today's 100 largest
public companies, only five are holdovers from the top 100
of 1917. Half the firms in the top 100 are newcomers over
just the past two decades. Although flux is a constant for
the economy, the evidence suggests that the pace has picked
up. In the 60 years after 1917, it took an average of 30 years
to replace half the companies in the top 100. Between 1977
and 1998, supplanting half the top 100 required an average
of 12 years, nearly tripling the turnover rate.[6]
Market Capitalization Soars
Expanding the inquiry to cover
all publicly held U.S. companies, ranked by change in market
capitalization since 1990, provides a more detailed portrait
of the economy's shifting ground. During the current eight-year
expansion, the market value of the overwhelming majority of
companies has increased. Indeed, the total market capitalization
of U.S. companies has soared from $2.6 trillion to almost
$10 trillion during the decade.[7] Beneath the surface, however,
a lot of churning has occurred. To depict the changing fortunes
of America's companies, we looked at the relative performance
of market capitalization—firms moving up and down in
the pecking order. When the market-value ranking of Cisco
Systems, a major Internet supplier, jumped from 956 in 1990
to 15 in 1998, it reflected vast shifts in how consumers are
spending their money. Oshkosh B'Gosh, a maker of children's
clothing, dropped from 967 to 2,479, suggesting it didn't
fare as well.
For the economy as a whole, it's been
a dynamic time. Two entirely new categories of companies have
emerged in the 1990s—biological products and computer
communications (Internet). In eight years, hundreds of new
firms have entered the rankings and zoomed past such established
companies as Tandy, Sunbeam and Pizza Inn. Falling in the
rankings, however, doesn't necessarily mean failure. An overwhelming
majority of companies increased their market value. For example,
Sears, Roebuck and Co.'s value on financial markets nearly
doubled from 1990 to 1998. Nevertheless, Sears' ranking in
corporate America fell 66 places—from 87 to 153, proving
that even well-run, profitable enterprises have found it difficult
to stay up with the streaking Microsofts and Intels.
The gainers during 1990-98 were technology,
finance and health care. Consumer products, both perishables
and durables, maintained their large chunk of the economic
pie. The share of market capitalization slipped in recent
years for utilities, energy and basic materials. Some highlights
from the data:[8]
- Companies on the upswing include Disney and Time Warner,
a reflection of the rise of information and entertainment.
Holding its place among the corporate elite was McDonald's,
the quintessential expression of America's taste for fast
food. Starbucks, the ubiquitous purveyor of coffee, came
out of nowhere to rank among the 500 largest U.S. companies.
- The number of pharmaceutical companies increased by 103
between 1990 and 1998—going from 65 to 168. Every
pharmaceutical company in business for the entire period
moved up in the rankings, marching ahead on new treatments
for AIDs, impotence and other conditions. Genentech, a firm
working on DNA products, leaped over 303 enterprises in
market value.
- Prepackaged software has been one of the economy's high
fliers. The number of publicly traded companies rose from
just 58 in 1990 to 328 by 1998. Microsoft shot straight
to the top ranks of corporate America. Oracle, Computer
Associates, BMC Software, Compuware, PeopleSoft and other
software manufacturers also improved their positions among
public companies.
- Led by industry giants Intel and Texas Instruments, producers
of semiconductors and related devices increased their value
relative to the market. Others in this group include Micron
Technology, Maxim Integrated Products, Linear Technology
and Altera Corp.
- Results have been mixed among telecommunications businesses.
Some of the biggest names slipped—AT&T, BellSouth,
GTE Corp. and US West, for example. The expanding long-distance
market allowed Sprint, MCI and WorldCom to improve their
positions even before the latter two companies merged.
- In financial services, the biggest banks tended to get
bigger and move up in the rankings, a fact that shouldn't
surprise after a decade of highly publicized mergers. Wachovia,
Sun Trust and First Chicago resisted the urge to merge and
lost ground. There were 182 new savings institutions—most
of them small, regional operations.
- For security brokers and dealers, the great bull market
of the 1990s has paid off handsomely. Morgan Stanley, Paine
Webber and Merrill Lynch leapfrogged over hundreds of companies.
Charles Schwab, leader of a new breed of discount brokers,
showed the most striking gain, moving up 733 notches to
311th place.
- Some specialty retailers did well. Staples and Office
Depot jumped up sharply. So did Ross clothing outlets, the
Gap and Abercrombie & Fitch. Among grocery stores, Safeway,
Kroger, Fred Meyer and Publix moved up.[9] The success of
Amazon.com and other Internet retailers was just part of
a boom that resulted in the creation of 55 new, publicly
held catalog and mail-order houses. Wal-Mart held its own,
but other variety stores slid, with Kmart down 239 places
and Venture Stores falling 8,025 spots. Department stores
are losing favor: only one of 12 existing chains gained
ground.
- Air transportation was a mixed bag. Stock prices reflected
the success of low-cost airlines. Continental surged more
than 1,100 places; Southwest and US Airways rose, too. Traditional
carriers slipped in the rankings, with UAL Corp., parent
of United Airlines, falling 265 places.
- Many old-line restaurant chains lost their luster. Of
the 54 public companies operating eating places from 1990
to 1998, 52 fell in the rankings. Luby's, Shoney's, Spaghetti
Warehouse and Sizzler all declined at least 1,682 spots.[10]
Eighty-six new restaurant companies emerged in the 1990s,
evidence that Americans are dining out more often. Jumping
into the corporate rankings at relatively high spots were
the companies behind Planet Hollywood, Papa John's Pizza
and Outback Steakhouse.
- As the economy moved toward technology and services, basic
industries continued their relative declines. The tally
of companies falling in the corporate rankings: 88 of 91
crude oil and natural gas producers, 10 of 12 agricultural
companies, all 10 woven-fabric mills, 11 of 12 women's clothing
stores, 44 of 46 electric utilities and all shoe manufacturers
except athletic footwear kingpins Nike and Reebok.
The Establishment View
Market value isn't the only measure
of corporate America's ups and downs. While market value anticipates
future profits—and thus future sales—the same
patterns are often already apparent in companies' current
sales.[11] An entirely separate view of the churn, however,
comes from looking at the total number of establishments (publicly
and privately held) in each industry (Table 2). Fur goods
showed the largest decline from 1990 to 1996, most likely
a reflection of changing tastes and animal rights campaigns.
Once health concerns became paramount, asbestos producers
went into decline. Movie buffs aren't going to drive-ins anymore.
Among the other businesses experiencing declines are barber
shops, broom and brush manufacturing, bowling alleys, manufactured
ice, and radio and television repair.
Consumers' preferences and new technologies
lie behind the biggest winners. Videotape rentals have boomed
as the VCR has become a fixture in American households. New
technology also lies behind the boom in prepackaged software,
semiconductors and computing equipment. As Americans have
gotten wealthier, they've spent a greater part of their disposable
income on entertainment and services. So the country has more
movie production, more amusement parks, more eating and drinking
establishments and more travel-related businesses. It has
more carpet cleaners and car washes. The demands of health-conscious
Americans have also given rise to nearly 3,000 new physical
fitness facilities in just the past six years.
Appreciating the Churn
The churn among firms illustrates
that a free enterprise system never stands still. Constant,
sometimes unsettling change is an indispensable part of what
could be called the Great American Growth Machine. At its
core are consumers and their endless list of needs, wants,
conveniences, amusements and luxuries. Unlimited wants clash
with the fundamental fact of limited resources—a.k.a.
scarcity. We can't have everything we want, but we can satisfy
more of our desires if we conserve and stretch our resources.
For employers and workers, it means boosting productivity,
the driving force for higher wages. For consumers, it means
shopping for the best value. The system works because of competition:
companies vie for customers, making more money if they're
able to cut costs while offering consumers a better deal (Chart
1).
With many competitors, there's a constant
drive to find new ways to meet consumers' needs—that
is, to innovate. Companies offer lower prices, better performance,
new features, catchier styling, faster service, more convenient
locations, higher status, aggressive marketing or attractive
packaging. Innovation comes in constant waves: inventions
of new goods and services, improvements to existing products
and increases in the efficiency of the factory, farm and office.
The interplay of innovation and competition roils the status
quo. New firms and industries emerge to take the market from
existing ones. Surviving firms reorganize production using
more, newer and better tools, making workers more productive.
Consumers' tastes and expectations evolve. Companies that
can no longer deliver what consumers want at ever-cheaper
prices don't survive.
As with the churn of jobs, there's no
mistaking where the change in America's corporate pecking
order is taking us—to a postindustrial economy that
provides what Americans want. We may lament the tragedies
of the churn's downside, but we shouldn't lose sight of its
very powerful and important upside: it makes us better off.
What's really going on is a healthy
recycling of resources. In other words, it's conservation,
not carnage.
—W. Michael Cox and Richard Alm
 |
| Notes
- On December 22, 1998, Sears, Roebuck and Co.'s
market capitalization was $15.8 billion, compared
with $17 billion for Amazon.com.
- Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, 1992 Annual
Report.
- Schumpeter (1950, p. 83).
- Although typically scorned, hostile takeovers,
too, are a vital part of the economy's health-revitalization
process. Corporate raiders and liquidators,
in essence, act like an autoimmune system for
the economy—surrounding, terminating and
removing bad management practices that plague
company profitability, thereby restoring the
overall economy to health.
- In 1997, 83,384 businesses failed in the United
States, most of them small enterprises. Over
the past quarter century, the failure rate doubled—from
44 per 10,000 concerns in 1970 to 88 in 1997—again,
indicative of a faster churn.
- Further discussion of downsizing and economic
churn can be found in Cox and Alm (1999, Chapter
6).
- With the exception of Amazon.com and Sears,
all market values in this article are calculated
as of August 1998. All rankings (including those
of Sears and Amazon.com) are also as of August.
- Again, the analysis involves publicly traded
companies only.
- Kroger and Fred Meyer announced a $13 billion
merger in October 1998.
- In September 1998, Consolidated Restaurant
Cos. announced it would buy Spaghetti Warehouse
in a $60 million deal. Once the transaction
is completed, Spaghetti Warehouse will disappear
from the corporate rankings.
- Because tomorrow is more uncertain than today,
rankings based on market value are generally
more volatile than those based on sales; but
market value data more clearly reveal coming
shifts in employment and sales.
References
Cox, W. Michael, and Richard
Alm (1999), Myths of Rich and Poor (New
York: Basic Books).
Schumpeter, Joseph A. (1939),
Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical,
and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process,
Vol. 1 (New York: McGraw-Hill).
———
(1950), Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy,
3rd ed. (New York: Harper & Brothers). |
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|
Beyond
the Border
Do International Financial Crises Defy Diagnosis?
In December 1994, the world watched
the financial meltdown of Mexico in disbelief. Most analysts
had regarded Mexico's economic prospects as among the brightest
in Latin America, especially after the inception of the North
American Free Trade Agreement at the beginning of that year.
Mexico's sudden and unexpected collapse started when its central
bank devalued the peso about 15 percent on December 20. What
was intended as a minor correction triggered a massive capital
outflow that forced the Banco de Mexico to abandon the defense
of the peso and let it float. Within a month, the peso had
lost almost 40 percent of its value. In the form of the so-called
tequila effect, the crisis spread to other Latin American
countries, especially Argentina, and even to East Asia.
The crisis' devastating effect on emerging
markets everywhere finally seemed to be subsiding when, on
July 2, 1997, Thailand sought a small correction of its own
exchange rate and let its currency float. The pattern seen
in Mexico was repeated. A relatively small devaluation of
about 20 percent triggered a financial stampede, and by year's
end the Thai baht had lost almost 50 percent of its value
against the U.S. dollar.
The crisis did not remain confined to
Thailand. Like its Mexican counterpart almost three years
earlier, the crisis quickly spread to other countries in the
region, with Malaysia, Indonesia and South Korea the most
affected. Analysts were stunned by such a turn of events in
what had been the fastest growing part of the world for two
decades. The aftershocks of the financial earthquake were
felt as far afield as Latin America (especially Brazil) and
Russia.
The dramatic occurrence of financial
crises just three years apart has prompted much research.
Unfortunately, much paper and ink later, economists have yet
to produce any convincing answers. The explanations they offer
are typically little more than working hypotheses, many of
them seemingly aimed at making headlines rather than science.
Explaining these crises requires hard work, not overnight
inspiration. In attempting to understand them, economists
and policymakers face the same difficult task as doctors do
in researching and curing cancer.
Indeed, there are many parallels between
cancer and exchange rate and financial crises. Doctors can
recognize cancer and sometimes explain how it works once a
person has it, but they usually cannot predict whether and
when the disease will strike a particular person. Likewise,
economists can recognize a financial or currency crisis when
they see one, but they generally are unable to anticipate
whether or when it will hit a particular country.
Moreover, doctors know much about metastasis,
the process by which cancer in certain organs of the human
body can quickly and lethally spread to other organs. Similarly,
economists are knowledgeable about the contagion effects of
financial crises and how they can spread from one country
to the next almost overnight.
Despite recent progress, medical researchers
are still far from fully understanding the ultimate causes
of cancer, and they often cannot cure or eradicate it as a
result. Their situation is analogous to that of economists
examining financial and currency crises. Many in the profession
who thought they completely understood such occurrences are
less sure of it since the Mexican and East Asian crises.
Until those episodes, most economists
considered a lack of fiscal discipline the culprit in currency
and financial disease. The diagnosis appeared correct because
fiscal indiscipline did seem responsible for some crises in
the past. From there, economists jumped to the conclusion
that fiscal indiscipline is the ultimate cause of all currency
crises and financial meltdowns. But in 1994, Mexico had an
exchange rate crisis even though the country was fiscally
sound. Because the Mexican crisis defied conventional wisdom,
the managing director of the International Monetary Fund dubbed
it the first crisis of the 21st century.
What is puzzling about the latest generation
of crises is that they seem as unforgiving as cancer: both
can strike in the absence of behavior that might have increased
the odds of getting the disease. Lung cancer can certainly
hit heavy smokers. But some heavy smokers never get the disease,
while some people who have never smoked do get lung cancer.
Mexico and East Asian countries were
not "heavy smokers," in the sense that by OECD standards,
their fiscal accounts were exemplary at the time they were
hit by crisis. In fact, Mexican and South Korean policies
were considered sound enough to gain the two countries admission
into the OECD not long before their respective crises.
But when Thailand's crisis hit and Indonesia's
and Malaysia's followed, economists decided that even if current
fiscal imbalances (current smoking) were not part of the problem,
it must have been the anticipation of future fiscal problems
(future smoking) that spooked investors. According to this
explanation, the problem in East Asia was not the explicit
fiscal deficit but the deficit implicit in fragile financial
systems that eventually would require bailouts. Bailouts did,
indeed, occur, increasing government debt by as much as 15
percent of GDP in Mexico and South Korea, for example.
This theory is not without its flaws.
That a loan is bad becomes obvious to everyone once a borrower
has defaulted. To be convincing, such a theory should prove
that the loans that went sour were an obviously bad bet before
the fact. Such proof will be hard to find because it would
imply that the lenders were negligent when they evaluated
the loans and decided they were acceptable risks. Do theoretical
economists know more than bankers and financial intermediaries
about the quality of a loan? Do they know more than those
who recommended OECD membership for Mexico and South Korea?
Or is this theory just another example of Monday morning quarterbacking?
Despite what remains unknown about cancer,
one thing doctors do know is that history seems to play a
role in the disease. A person is more likely to get cancer
or a particular form of cancer if there is a family history
of it. Likewise, countries that experience capital account
blowouts and financial meltdowns are often countries that
may be behaving well (not smoking) now but have a history
of policy instability (smoking in the past) that some in the
investment community have not forgotten. This does not mean
that countries with an exemplary past will always dodge financial
crises, any more than patients with no family history of cancer
always elude the disease. It does mean that reputation is
important in a world where countries of recent virtue are
penalized for histories of impropriety, as Mexico and Argentina
had. Perhaps one reason Chile was not as seriously hit by
the tequila effect was that its most recent improprieties
were much farther in the past than Mexico's and Argentina's
or, for that matter, Brazil's.
Another thing economists do know is
that both Mexico and Thailand had a policy of pegged exchange
rates—that is, exchange rates that fell somewhere between
fully flexible and absolutely fixed. The apparent commonality
has led to speculation that as a result of these financial
crises, "the options for currencies have been
'hollowed
out.' Governments should let them either float, or fix them
permanently (with a currency board, or in a monetary union)."
(The Economist, November 28, 1998, p. 82)
Such speculation will have to meet scientific
standards before it can be regarded as anything more than
just that—speculation.
Meanwhile, intellectual honesty requires
that economists admit they do not fully understand the currency
and financial crises of the late 20th century. Sadly, this
means the only sure bet is that many such crises will occur
in the 21st century before their causes and cures are found.
— Carlos E. J. M. Zarazaga
Regional
Update
Texas as a whole grew at a 3.3-percent
annual rate in the first 11 months of 1998, but the growth
was not evenly distributed throughout the state. Low commodity
prices and inclement weather depressed growth in agriculture
and energy, causing problems not only for Texas but also for
Texas' major trading partners—Mexico and Canada. While
some regions of the state were largely insulated from these
effects by low interest rates and the continued strength of
the U.S. economy, other regions were fully exposed. As a general
rule, agricultural areas, the oil patch and the border with
Mexico grew more slowly than the rest of the state.
The major exception was El Paso, which
grew more rapidly than the state average in 1998 (see chart
below). El Paso added 8,500 jobs between December 1997 and
November 1998 as strong job growth in services, government
and transportation more than offset job losses in other industries.
Maquiladora industries are a bright spot in the Mexican economy,
and much of El Paso's strength relative to other cities along
the border with Mexico can be attributed to El Paso's position
as a service, supply and distribution center for the maquiladoras.
Primarily as a result of the solid employment
growth, El Paso's traditionally high unemployment rate fell
in 1998 to its lowest average annual rate of the decade—10
percent. Despite the recent declines, however, the unemployment
rate in El Paso remains more than double that of any other
large Texas metropolitan area. Among Texas cities, only Brownsville
and McAllen have higher unemployment rates than El Paso.
— Lori L. Taylor
| 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
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a copy is provided to the Research Department
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Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the Public
Affairs Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas,
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