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How to Call Texas Recessions

John Thompson looks at the indicators economists use to determine the path of an economic downturn.

After expanding for 10 years straight, the national economy slid into recession in March 2001. Since then, the Texas economy has sustained losses in employment and experienced flattened output growth. Now, 24 months after turning down, the state economy is still trying to stabilize. But did Texas ever go into recession? And if it did, has it followed the nation—which began recovering around December 2001—out of recession?

Economists rely on several key indicators to provide information that can help them determine the path of an economic downturn. This article analyzes these indicators and answers the recession question for Texas.

What Is Recession?
In the popular press, a recession is often defined as a period of at least two consecutive quarters of declining output. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), which calls business cycles, defines recession as "a significant decline in activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, visible in industrial production, employment, real income, and wholesale and retail trade.” More than just a period of diminished activity, a recession is a period of diminishing activity.[1] To make this determination, the NBER looks at many indicators, focusing particular attention on timely monthly measures of economic activity.

Since some facets of the NBER's definition can only be confirmed on a lagged basis, it usually doesn’t take a stand on business-cycle dates until some time after a change in direction is evident. Such was the case in November 2001, when the NBER’s Business Cycle Dating Committee determined that the U.S. economy peaked in March 2001. And even though most economists believe the nation emerged from recession in December 2001, the NBER has not yet determined an ending date to the recession.[2]

Basis of NBER Decisions
At the national level, the NBER examines four coincident indicators—or economic indicators that tend to move with the overall economy.

Industrial Production. The industrial production index gauges the variation in output in national manufacturing, mining, and electric and gas utilities. It is responsible for a large fraction of the change in total output and is therefore tracked by the NBER as a valuable indicator of the present state of the economy. The Federal Reserve Board produces this data series.

Personal Income. Real personal income less transfer payments calculates household income from employment, self-employment and investments. Personal income is important because it can be used to predict future consumer spending trends and because prolonged weakness in its growth signifies a reduction in consumer demand. Reduced consumer spending can negatively affect overall economic activity since it accounts for 68 percent of GDP. The Bureau of Economic Analysis produces the personal income data series.

Manufacturing and Trade Sales. Manufacturing and trade sales measure the volume of real sales in the manufacturing, wholesale trade and retail trade sectors. Long-term trends in manufacturing sales and wholesale trade are indicative of rising or falling inventory levels. Changes in retail sales indicate variations in consumer spending patterns. The Bureau of Economic Analysis and the Commerce Department compile the manufacturing and trade sales data.

Payroll Employment. Payroll employment is a measure of the current number of nonagricultural jobs. Total job count is based on a monthly survey of business establishments. The employment situation is one of the most widely followed economic statistics because of its timeliness, accuracy and importance in estimating overall economic activity. The Bureau of Labor Statistics compiles the employment data.

Coincident Index. As a compilation of the above four, the coincident index is designed to mirror changes in overall economic activity. Though the NBER generally does not cite the coincident index in its releases, it remains a convenient measure because of its at-a-glance nature. The Conference Board compiles the coincident index.

What About Calling Recessions in Texas?
While the NBER settles recession-dating matters at the national level, no such entity exists for calling Texas recessions. Consequently, researchers at the Dallas Fed worked to develop a transparent methodology for ascertaining business peaks and troughs in the state.

The same variables tracked by the NBER to determine business-cycle dates are not all available at the state level or in the desired frequency. Nevertheless, the Dallas Fed has compiled a list of economic variables that are generally coincident with the overall state economy. Analysis of these variables can paint an overall picture of the current economy and can help determine business-cycle dating at the state level. Variables examined by FRB Dallas include employment growth, the unemployment rate and gross state product growth, which are the components of the Texas Coincident Index, created by Keith Phillips of the Dallas Fed.

Employment Growth. Texas payroll employment is a measure of the current number of nonagricultural jobs. Total job count is based on a monthly survey of business establishments. As at the national level, the Texas employment situation is one of the most widely followed economic statistics because of its timeliness, accuracy and importance in estimating overall economic activity. The Bureau of Labor Statistics compiles the employment data.

Unemployment Rate. The unemployment rate is the number of unemployed workers in the labor force divided by the labor force. At the national level, the unemployment rate is a leading indicator at cycle peaks and a lagging indicator at troughs. At the state level, statistical analysis shows the Texas unemployment rate to be roughly coincident with overall economic activity. Rises in the unemployment rate suggest softening in economic activity, whereas downward pressure in the measure indicates increased activity and labor tightness. The Bureau of Labor Statistics compiles the unemployment data.

Gross State Product. Texas gross state product (GSP) is a comprehensive measure of statewide economic activity. The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates real GSP but the series is severely lagged (usually about two and a half years after the reporting year). The untimeliness of this series severely limits its usefulness. Researchers at the Dallas Fed have gotten around this problem by using quarterly personal income and various price measures to accurately predict movements in total Texas GSP. However, even this improved series comes out about four months after the reporting quarter. Nevertheless, gross state product is an important indicator of economic activity because of its comprehensive scope.

Texas Coincident Index. A succinct picture of the overall economy emerges as we examine a composite index. The Texas Coincident Index is an economic statistic that combines employment growth, the unemployment rate and GSP to gauge the current state of the Texas economy. [3] Historically, movements in the index have coincided with changes in overall economic activity (as measured by employment and output). In other words, during periods of economic expansion the coincident index increases; when the economy contracts, the index falls. For these reasons, the index is a useful at-a-glance series for determining the current dynamics in the Texas economy.

Current Conditions
Texas went into recession in March or April 2001, and the state job market has yet to get back its legs. Economic frailty continues to be manifested in the employment figures. Since peaking in March of 2001, Texas has lost 155,500 jobs (Chart 1). With month-over-month employment growth figures bouncing from positive to negative territory, labor market trends have been anything but conclusive (Chart 2).

Chart 1
Texas employment no longer declining, but still fairly flat

Chart 2
Employment growth bouncing around

The Texas unemployment rate has skyrocketed since bottoming out at 3.9 percent in December of 2000. It hiccupped a few times over this rise but has not yet manifested any clear signals of an improvement in the overall labor market (Chart 3).

Chart 3
Texas unemployment shot upward from 2001 to mid-2002

Year-over-year growth in Texas GSP turned positive in the third quarter of 1987 and continued in positive territory until the third quarter of 2001. The state then sustained three consecutive quarters of declines in year-over-year GSP growth. Growth resumed in the second and third quarters of 2002, as the year-over-year figure turned positive again (Chart 4). Quarter-over-quarter figures have been positive since second quarter 2002.

Chart 4
Texas gross state product relatively flat

Month-over-month changes in the coincident index turned negative in March of 2001 and remained in the red until December of 2002. Readings since then have suggested mild improvements in the overall state economy (Chart 5).

Chart 5
Texas inching out of recession?

Texas Economy More Stable
Calling recessions for Texas is a slippery task. To help answer questions regarding the state’s business cycle, the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas has constructed the Texas Coincident Index to determine turning points in the state’s economy. Based on this methodology and the data we currently have available, the coincident index suggests that the Texas economy seems to have emerged from recession at the end of 2002. However, the data that the index's latest readings are based on are preliminary and subject to revision. As with the NBER, a final determination of business-cycle dates must wait until the data accurately and clearly manifest a change in economic activity.

Additional Information

“New Economy, New Recession?” Evan F. Koenig, Thomas F. Siems and Mark A. Wynne, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Southwest Economy, March/April 2002

“A New Quarterly Output Measure for Texas,” Franklin D. Berger and Keith R. Phillips,Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic Review, Third Quarter 1995

"A New Monthly Index of the Texas Business Cycle," Keith R. Phillips, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, forthcoming third quarter 2003.

Note
1 NBER, November 26, 2001, “The Business-Cycle Peak of March 2001.”
2 On average the NBER takes about 10 months to make definitive statements on business-cycle dates.
3 GSP figures into the Coincident Index as it becomes available—usually four months after the reporting quarter.

John Thompson is an associate economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Thompson, John (2003), "How to Call Texas Recessions," Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Expand Your Insight, May 2, 2002, http://www.dallasfed.org/eyi/regional/0305recession.html


5-2-2003

 

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