Click to skip navigation.
Dallas Fed Home Page Dallas Fed Home Page
About  
the Fed
Economic
Research
Economic
Data
Banking
Info
Financial
Services
Publications
& Resources
Community
Affairs
Economic
Education
News &
Events
Economic Research Home
About Economic Research
Publications
Economists
Economic Data
Center for Latin American Economics
Events
Resources and Links
E-mail Alerts
E-mail This Page
 
Houston Business—A Perspective on the Houston Economy

March 2003
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Houston Branch

Goodbye SIC, Hello NAICS: A Fresh Slate for Houston Jobs Data

Statistical data collection in the United States is carried out by many public agencies, including the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and Census Bureau. Government entities use a variety of norms and standards to ensure consistency in data collection, including guidelines for the classification of businesses by industry.

In 1937, the Central Statistical Board established an Interdepartmental Committee on Classification to provide an exhaustive list of manufacturing and nonmanufacturing industries. By 1939, this list had evolved into the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) system for the United States. Although SIC has been revised extensively over the past 60 years, when a user of U.S. economic data has referred to mining, manufacturing, construction, financial, service or more detailed industries, SIC has provided rigorous and consistent meaning to the term.

In 1992, the U.S. Office of Management and Budget established the Economic Classification Policy Committee (ECPC)—chaired by BEA and joined by BLS and the Census Bureau—to conduct a “fresh slate” examination of SIC and to design an improved conceptual framework for industrial classification. A series of concerns and issues provoked this reexamination: lack of internal consistency in SIC; its overemphasis on manufacturing, underemphasis on services and inability to cope with high-technology and other emerging industries; and a North American Free Trade Agreement-imposed need for consistency in data collection among the participating countries.

The resulting scheme, developed jointly by Canada, Mexico and the United States with ECPC representing the latter, is the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). NAICS is not a simple revision or rearrangement of SIC but a radical break in both classification scheme and concept.

The new NAICS is suddenly important to readers of Houston Business because the primary source of timely and comprehensive data on the Houston economy is the BLS’s monthly Covered Employment and Wages (ES-202) program. In early 2003, the SIC data series for ES-202 will be replaced by the NAICS-based data series. Although mining, manufacturing and construction data will still be reported in Houston, they will reflect different concepts from those reported just last year under SIC. NAICS also will report major new sectors, such as information, accommodation and food services, and health care and social assistance.

The NAICS System
Table 1 shows Houston employment for the fourth quarter of 2000 as defined under the 10 major SIC divisions. Total wages, average quarterly wages per worker and average weekly wages are summarized at the bottom. Under the most recent (1987) revision, SIC detailed 1,004 industries in these 10 major divisions, although only 53 categories were regularly reported for Houston.

Table 1
Houston Employment Under SIC (4Q 2000)
Agriculture
12,451
 
Mining
62,422
 
Construction
139,913
 
Manufacturing
189,548
 
TCPU
146,789
 
Wholesale trade
120,642
 
Retail trade
311,550
 
FIRE
102,448
 
Services
556,296
 
Government
229,984
 
Total employment
1,872,043
 
Total wages
$20,911,259,055
 
Average quarterly wages
$11,170
 
Average weekly wages
$859
 
NOTE: TCPU is Transportation, Communication and Public Utilities; FIRE is Finance, Insurance and Real Estate.
SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Table 2 summarizes the same data under NAICS. NAICS provides 20 high-level sectors, as opposed to SIC’s 10. In addition to those sectors shown in Table 2, Trade, Transportation and Utilities is further broken into Wholesale Trade, Retail Trade, Transportation and Warehousing, and Utilities. Financial Activities is divided into Finance and Insurance plus Real Estate, Rental and Leasing. Professional and Business Services includes Professional, Scientific and Technical Services; Management of Companies and Enterprises; and Administrative and Support Services. Education and Health Services is divided into the two sectors in the title, as is Leisure and Hospitality. At the most detailed level, these 20 broad NAICS sectors ultimately contain 1,170 industries.

Table 2
Houston Employment Under NAICS (4Q 2000)
Natural resources and mining
59,574
 
Construction
140,674
 
Manufacturing
187,841
 
Trade, Transportation and Utilities
421,780
 
Information
43,742
 
Financial activities
112,854
 
Professional and business services
299,193
 
Education and health services
168,018
 
Leisure and hospitality
148,567
 
Other services
57,907
 
Nonclassifiable
950
 
Public administration
229,984
 
Total employment
1,871,084
 
Total wages
$20,902,154,597
 
Average quarterly wages
$11,171
 
Average weekly wages
$859
 
SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics.

NAICS was developed to achieve several broad purposes. One was to shift the emphasis of the classification scheme to the rapidly growing service sectors; about two-fifths of the NAICS industries are goods-producing, as opposed to three-fifths under SIC. Another was to include a number of emerging and high-tech industries; we now find wireless telecommunications, software publishing, Internet service providers and web search portals among the industries on the NAICS list.

Additionally, every effort was made to provide international compatibility through NAICS. By developing NAICS jointly, U.S., Mexican and Canadian statistical agencies met the NAFTA requirement of providing classification compatibility throughout North America down to detailed levels. The structure is also generally compatible with the United Nations International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities.

Finally, NAICS is entirely production-oriented, with the establishments grouped in each industry classification on the basis of sharing a common technology and production process. Clearly, many of the SIC categories were production-based (metal stamping, foundries, textiles). But others were better seen as market-based (products forming a unique market and often being close substitutes for each other). Children’s or women’s clothing, for example, may not share a common production process but were grouped on a market basis. Soft drinks and snack foods were similarly grouped.

NAICS eliminates all demand-oriented categories, moving to a consistent scheme of defining all classifications based on common production processes and classifying all establishments strictly by what they do.

NAICS Problems
The biggest problem with NAICS’s fresh-slate approach is that it represents a major break with the past. Thus, it leaves a gap in many important data series for those interested in trends, forecasting or seasonal adjustment. Of the 1,170 NAICS industries, only 422 (36 percent) have direct SIC counterparts, 390 (33 percent) are significantly revised and the remaining 358 (31 percent) are new classifications. Also, many of the reclassifications cross major industry groups, meaning that comparisons of even large categories such as mining, manufacturing and finance cannot be made pre- and post-SIC.

Further, the NAICS approach of classifying every establishment based on its production process is a substantial change in procedure. Consider, for example, the Covered Employment and Wages Program that provides monthly employment data for the United States (including Houston). NAICS required reassessment of the industry classification of 8 million establishments over a four-year period, with each establishment classified to the industry that reflects its primary productive activity. Thus, the industry categories for many establishments have changed.

Table 3 illustrates this change using an example provided by the Census Bureau. A hypothetical manufacturing company is made up of seven distinct establishments, each performing a certain business function. There are two factories, one manufacturing mufflers and the other tailpipes; a warehouse; a research and development lab; a sales center; a headquarters; and a payroll function.

Table 3
Establishment Classification Under SIC and NAICS
Facility
Purpose
SIC Classification
NAICS Classification
A
Mufflers
Auto parts manufacture
Auto parts manufacture
B
Tailpipes
Auto
parts manufacture
Auto
parts manufacture
C
Warehouse
Auto
parts manufacture
Transportation and warehousing
D
R&D
Auto
parts manufacture
Professional and technical services
E
Sales
Wholesale trade
Wholesale trade
F
Headquarters
Auto
parts manufacture
Headquarters
G
Payroll
Auto
parts manufacture
Professional and technical services
NOTE: Example is from Clarification Memorandum No. 3, “Classifying SIC Auxiliary Establishments in NAICS,” at www.census.gov/epcd/www/naimemo3.htm [off-site].

Under SIC, all of the separate administrative establishments associated with this company would be classified under Auto Parts Manufacture except for the sales unit, which goes to Wholesale Trade. Under SIC, the establishments provided support for a manufacturing activity; the classification was on the basis of the company activity, and the jobs were assigned to the auto industry.

Under NAICS, however, each establishment is judged on its own merit, and only the muffler and tailpipe factories are in manufacturing. The payroll function, for example, is treated no differently from any independent payroll processing service; it is classified in NAICS 541214, Payroll Services, part of Professional and Technical Services.

The example shows that differences between SIC and NAICS reflect more than establishing a new classification scheme and moving establishments from one category to another. Under NAICS, the initial establishment classification becomes completely production-based, and establishments are widely reclassified. Although classification structure is compatible, this production-based scheme is unique to NAICS, making it different from SIC, from the United Nations’ classification and from other international schemes.

Implications for Houston
It is a fresh slate for Houston data, too. Users of employment, wage and other data at the state and local level are the most disadvantaged because of the break in the data series NAICS imposes. Total employment and employment for some large sectors will be provided for the nation back to 1939; start dates for finer detail vary widely. For states and local areas, only total employment data will be available back to 1939; nothing more detailed than total employment will be available for before January 1990.

The inconvenience of NAICS at the local level will be less than anticipated. For the Houston area, monthly employment reports will now provide data on more than 60 NAICS categories—up from the 53 reported under SIC. We will see new job categories, such as heavy construction, computer manufacturing, telecommunications, computer systems design, and nursing and residential care facilities. BLS will provide historical detail back to January 1990 on all 60-plus industries using bridge tables containing estimates based on ratios between SIC and NAICS industries.

Robert W. Gilmer
  Jonathan Story

Story is an analyst in the Bank Administration Department at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Houston Branch.

Houston Beige Book
February 2003

Houston Beige Book respondents provided a mixed review of the local economy, indicating little overall change in fundamentals. There was no significant job growth, but the local unemployment rate has stayed at a seasonally adjusted 5.7 percent for three months. The local purchasing managers index moved back over 50 in January, indicating mild expansion, and the single-family housing market remains very strong. Weakness continued in auto and retail sales.

Retail and Auto Sales
Retail sales were reported to be very soft across all segments of the market, from discount and department stores to furniture and grocery stores. Since the holidays, retailers have been falling further and further behind plan. Auto dealers are finding that last year’s rebates and discounts stole sales from this year, with January sales in Harris County running 8 percent below last January’s.

Oil Markets
Excitement in recent weeks has been provided by the fireworks in oil and natural gas prices, which moved over $35 per barrel for crude oil and $6 per thousand cubic feet for natural gas. Potential war in Iraq, class war in Venezuela and freezing weather in the Northeast and Midwest gave momentum to energy prices. There was a sharp pulldown in inventories of both crude and oil products, and stocks fell to near-critical levels for refinery system operations. With crude supplies unavailable to rebuild inventories, high gasoline prices are likely to persist through summer.

The loss of Venezuelan crude supplies hit Gulf Coast refiners hard. Refinery utilization rates fell from the mid-90 percent level in mid-January to mid-80 percent by early February and have improved slowly since. Refined product prices have shot upward but have generally lagged the price of crude, putting modest downward pressure on refiners’ profit margins.

Petrochemicals
High oil and natural gas prices are bad news downstream, and petrochemical producers have been forced to push through price increases to cover rapidly rising feedstock prices. Prices are up for polyethylene, polystyrene, butadiene, chlorine and polyvinyl chloride. Although demand has recovered over the past year, profit margins generally remain weak, and rising prices have been strictly an effort to maintain modest profit margins.

Drilling Activity
The domestic rig count improved to over 900 working rigs in February, but the new projects were generally conservative—onshore, vertical, lowcost wells. Service companies declined to declare a discernible upward trend in activity based on recent weekly increases. Any U.S. gains were offset by weakness overseas—turmoil in Venezuela, elections in Nigeria, seasonal weakness in the North Sea. A sharp decline in natural gas inventories bodes well for future drilling, but producers’ stock prices still do not reflect the sharp rise in oil and natural gas prices.

Real Estate
Low interest rates continue to drive strong sales of single-family housing in Houston. Existing homes hit the highest level of January sales ever, matched by both the highest median January home price and builder inventory. Apartment occupancy continued to fall in class A, as strong home sales and no job growth took their toll. Apartment rents, which were rising for most of last year, flattened in the fourth quarter, especially in class A.

Office rents continued to decline through the fourth quarter, just as they did all year. In pursuit of office tenants, property owners are offering free rent and free parking as well as moving and improvement allowances. The weakest markets are in the central business district, Westchase, Greenway Plaza and Galleria areas.

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.

Return to the top of the page.
Disclaimer/Privacy Policy
Complete issue [PDF]
Houston Business Archive
Frequently asked questions about PDFs
Goodbye SIC, Hello NAICS: A Fresh Slate for Houston Jobs Data
Houston Beige Book
Economic and Financial Policy Review
Southwest Economy
Expand Your Insight
Houston Business
Working Papers
Other Economic Research Publications
E-mail Subscriptions
Hardcopy Subscriptions
Back Issues/Individual Copies
Change of Address
Fed in Print—an index of Federal Reserve economic research [off-site]
Catalog of Public Information Materials
[off-site]