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Region Continues to See Broad-Based Improvement
June 25, 2010
The regional economy continues to grow at a moderate pace.
Payroll employment growth has strengthened in Texas, and
the unemployment rate has stabilized more than a percentage
point below the U.S. rate. Manufacturing and other sectors
that fared poorly during the recession show increasing signs of
life.
Labor Market
Texas payroll employment has rebounded in recent months,
growing at annual rates of 3.6 percent in April and 4.1 percent
in May (Chart 1).
Consistent with a broad-based if somewhat tepid economic
recovery, all of Texas’ major metro areas recorded similar employment upticks. The strongest growth occurred in El Paso,
where employment expanded at a 6.3 percent annual rate in
May. Houston (5.2 percent) and Dallas–Fort Worth (3.9 percent) also performed well.
The state unemployment rate was stable in April and May at
8.3 percent, a level slightly above 1991–92 recessionary highs
(Chart 2).
Texas manufacturing employment is rebounding strongly. It
rose an annualized 3.2 percent in April and 7.7 percent in May
after declining almost 6 percent in 2009. Of all manufacturing
subsectors, the machinery and fabricated metal industries recorded the most impressive growth.
Service-sector employment has also improved in recent
months. It rose 2.4 percent in April and 3.2 percent in May.
Subsectors showing exceptionally strong growth in May include leisure and hospitality and professional and business
services.
Construction and Real Estate
Construction employment is on the rise, increasing at annual
rates of 18.2 percent in April and 0.9 percent in May. This contrasts with declines of 7.8 percent over the previous quarter
and 9.1 percent over the previous year.
Texas housing starts jumped in the first quarter, up almost 60
percent from last year in Dallas–Fort Worth alone—though the
question remains whether these numbers can be sustained
following the April expiration of the homebuyer tax credits.
Construction contract values suggest that building activity is
recovering. Residential construction has fared the best, but
the five-month moving average of nonresidential contract values also climbed in May, the first such uptick since September
2009 (Chart 3).
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

On the real estate front, existing-home sales spiked in April
in conjunction with the expiring homebuyer tax credits, but
the less volatile six-month moving average remained essentially flat.
Energy
Natural resource and mining payroll employment continues
its rapid ascent, rising at annual rates of 21.3 percent in April
and 38.5 percent in May. Recent dramatic increases in well

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permit applications and the rig count reinforce the energy sector’s health over the last several months, with applications
climbing 22.7 percent year to date and the rig count up 38.7
percent (Chart 4). However, applications decreased in May
amid lingering uncertainty about how the recent Deepwater
Horizon explosion will affect sector activity going forward.
Exports
Texas exports increased at nonannualized rates of 3.1 percent
in March and 0.5 percent in April. First-quarter breakdowns
suggest exports to Latin America, Mexico, Canada and Asia
(excluding China) remained robust while exports to China and
the European Union dipped 8 percent and 14.8 percent, respectively (Chart 5).
Retail Sales and Consumer Confidence
Estimated retail sales rose at a 7.7 percent annualized rate in
March, roughly in line with national trends. Consumer confidence picked up as well, rising to 79.6 in the West South Central census region, which includes Texas. This is the highest
level since September of 2008.
Moderate Expansion
The Texas economy continues to expand at a moderate pace.
Encouraging signs are present in the manufacturing, energy,
construction and retail sectors.
The Texas Leading Index, a composite of eight indicators that
tend to change direction before the economy does, rose for
the third consecutive month in May and hit its highest value in
almost two years (Chart 6). This is consistent with continued
moderate expansion over the near term.
—Mike Nicholson and Jason Saving
………………………………………………………………………………………………..
About the Authors
Nicholson is a research analyst and Saving is a senior economist in the Research Department at the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas.

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

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