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Issue 2, March/April 1995
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Texas' Border: On the
Front Line of Change
Laredo's long lines of cars and trucks
backed up at bridges to Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, were replaced
in January by long lines of displaced workers at the unemployment
office. For Laredo and other border communities, 1994 was
a year of sweeping change, first as the North American Free
Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, took effect and then as the peso's
value plummeted. And 1995 promises even more change. Dozens
of border retailers, heavily dependent on Mexican shoppers,
have closed their doors. Export firms, truckers and customs
brokers whose businesses were bustling throughout 1994 now
wait for the peso to stabilize.
Despite current economic stress, long-run
prospects for the Mexican economy are bright. The border remains
an important distribution center to northern Mexico and will
continue to grow, but the changes of 1994 will influence the
region's economy well into the future.
Economic setbacks that could overwhelm
many cities are not new to border communities. In 1982, the
peso devalued 121 percent against the dollar in real terms.[1]
The current devaluation—55 percent from November 1994
through February 1995—probably won't be as severe as
the 1982 crisis. As NAFTA's new trade rules take effect and
consumers' disposable incomes fluctuate with the peso's value,
industries along the border will adjust to meet new demands.
The Texas-Mexico border stretches along
the Rio Grande for 1,248 miles—from El Paso to the lower
Rio Grande Valley. Border counties are home to more than 1.5
million people, or about 9.2 percent of Texas' population,
and about 6.4 percent of the state's total employment. The
border has a relatively large share, 11.5 percent, of Texas'
jobs in nondurable manufacturing, in part because of El Paso's
concentration of apparel and textile factories. Another important
border industry is wholesale and retail trade, which contributes
27 percent of all border jobs, compared with 24 percent statewide.
Heavy immigration to border cities keeps
unemployment rates higher than the state's 1994 average of
6.4 percent. Last year, the unemployment rate averaged 9 percent
in Laredo, 9.9 percent in El Paso, 11.5 percent in Brownsville-Harlingen-San
Benito and 16.5 percent in McAllen-Edinburg-Mission. Even
so, the border's employment growth has surpassed the state's
average in nine of the past 10 years. Despite their brisk
growth, border counties' incomes are among the lowest in the
nation; their 1992 per capita income averaged $10,933, about
59 percent of the state average of $18,437.
NAFTA's New Rules of the Game
While being a major benefactor
of freer trade, the border also benefits from barriers to
trade. For many years, cities along the border have thrived
selling goods and services to Mexican visitors and helping
the influx of importers and exporters comply with international
rules and regulations. In 1994, NAFTA changed the demand for
these services, and some businesses profited while others
suffered.
By lowering trade restrictions, NAFTA
made it easier for U.S. companies to set up shop in Mexico,
which reduced the demand for some border retail services,
particularly to Mexican wholesalers who export U.S. goods
to resell at home. With more U.S. outlets in Mexico, fewer
Mexicans need to cross the border to purchase U.S. goods.
Changing regulations under NAFTA lowered the cost of exporting
U.S. goods and reduced the demand for services that help traders
accommodate previous regulations.
At the same time, NAFTA's new rules
and restrictions boosted cross-border trade traffic and demand
for other services. Rising trade volume—accompanied
by new tariff rates, rules of origin and labeling requirements—helped
border customs brokers, import and export firms, and warehouses.
The Peso Is Devalued
After a year of sharply rising
trade, Mexico's December peso devaluation once again altered
the demand for border industries' products and services. The
number of loaded trucks crossing the Laredo Bridge System
southbound into Mexico increased 15 percent in 1994 and then
plummeted to pre-NAFTA levels following the devaluation. January
claims for unemployment insurance doubled (Chart 1). Retail
sales dropped over the holiday shopping season, typically
stores' busiest period of the year. Retailers quickly cut
back on inventories and employees and many stores eventually
closed. Sagging demand also led to layoffs in other border
service industries—including warehousing, transportation,
customs brokerage and freight forwarding.
The peso's changing value means U.S.
border residents must be mindful of daily peso-dollar exchange
rate movements. For nearly a decade, Mexican policy provided
a relatively predictable exchange rate for currency transactions.
During the mid-1980s, Mexico targeted the peso's value relative
to the dollar. Mexico began allowing the peso's value to float
within a widening band in 1991. After the December devaluation,
however, Mexico abandoned the band and allowed the exchange
rate to float freely. Now, the peso is far less likely to
show large reductions in value, but frequent small movements
are more likely.
The effects of Mexico's new exchange
rate policy are becoming evident. Since the devaluation, currency
exchange houses report an increase in business. For now, U.S.
stores that once accepted pesos or dollars are accepting only
dollars to avoid the risk of day-to-day exchange rate shifts,
or are accepting pesos at deep discounts from market value.
Day-to-day uncertainty has increased for Mexican shoppers
and businesses purchasing supplies in the United States because
exchange rates must be a consideration in every purchase.
The peso devaluation was not entirely
negative for border communities. The devaluation lowered the
cost of labor and other inputs for maquiladoras because most
operate on dollar-denominated budgets with costs in pesos.[2]
The peso's drop has sparked renewed interest in the Mexican
border as a low-cost off-shore manufacturing site. The benefits
maquiladoras derive from the peso's devaluation boost economic
activity, especially among U.S. legal, accounting, warehousing
and transportation firms. The border also benefits from maquiladoras'
expanding demand for goods and services from U.S. suppliers.
Although most of these suppliers are located outside the border
region, more of them are either opening operations on the
border or relocating there to lower transportation costs and
help maintain "just-in-time" inventories.[3]
A Bright Long-Run Outlook
Uncertainty over the Mexican economy
and the peso will bring continued change to border communities
in the near term. Analysts who initially thought the situation
would improve in six to eight months have extended their estimates
to a year or longer. Still, with economic fundamentals strong
in Mexico, long-run prospects for the border remain bright.
Major construction and infrastructure expansion plans continue
unabated, including those for a new hospital, hotels and freeways.
Large retailers are continuing with expansion plans based
on the positive long-term prospects for the region. In February,
Foley's announced plans to add stores in Brownsville, McAllen
and Laredo, and in March, JCPenney and Mervyn's opened new
stores in Laredo. Ultimately, the devaluation and its aftermath
may amount to nothing more than a speed bump along the region's
highway to prosperity.
—Fiona Sigalla
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| Notes
- The real value of the dollar against the peso,
according to the Dallas Fed's Trade-Weighted
Value of the Dollar Index, went from 71.5 to
157.7 from January 1982 to September 1982.
- Maquiladoras assemble goods in Mexico, importing
inputs duty-free as long as a percentage of
the final product is exported from Mexico. NAFTA
phases in new rules for Mexican sales by maquiladoras
during 1994-2000, greatly liberalizing maquiladoras'
access to domestic markets. In 1994, the allowance
of domestic sales as a share of the previous
year's export production was raised to 55 percent.
This allowance will increase annually from 1994
to 2000 in 5-percent increments. See Lucinda
Vargas, "The Changing Dynamics of the Maquiladora
Industry, Part 2" Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas, El Paso Branch Business Frontier,
November/December 1994.
- See Lucinda Vargas, "Border Economic
Integration: The Case of the Maquiladora Industry"
(Speech presented at the Fourth International
Conference on the Quality of Life on the Border)
University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, Texas,
March 17, 1994.
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What's
Happening to Americans' Income?
April marks the beginning of the fifth
consecutive year of U.S. economic expansion. Gross domestic
product (GDP) growth has averaged 3.1 percent since the recession's
trough, job growth in 1994 was the highest in a decade, unemployment
is hovering around historic lows, and the consumer price index
through 1994 registered its best four-year performance since
the early 1960s.
Despite this good news, many recent
media reports have painted a bleak picture of the average
American worker's prospects. These reports cite studies that
claim wages and incomes are falling, that economic progress
is not keeping pace with past rates and that everyone is not
sharing equally in the economy's gains. In light of these
conflicting views on the economy, it is understandable that
many people are asking, What's the truth?
A thorough assessment of Americans'
living standards must include a host of considerations that
matter to people, such as leisure time, working conditions,
life expectancy, pollution, crime and other aspects of life
(see Cox and Alm 1994). Clearly, more than purely pecuniary
considerations—wages, earnings, income—matter
to people. However, the bulk of the recent studies have focused
solely on monetary measures of Americans' well-being. This
article, therefore, focuses narrowly on money issues in an
attempt to sort through some of the conflicting information.
GDP and Consumption: The Long View
We begin by looking at GDP—the
broadest and most long-standing of the aggregate output and
income statistics.[1] Much of the hand-wringing has been over
GDP's apparently lackluster performance over the past two
decades, particularly as compared with the 1950s and 1960s.
Chart 1 shows per capita real GDP (red line), which is the
inflation-adjusted measure of the economy's output per person,
over the period 1869-1994. Per capita real GDP growth averaged
2.1 percent annually over the 1954-73 period, then slowed
to 1.6 percent through 1989.[2] The latter growth rate is
a half-point less, which represents a significant slowdown.
However, the rate of growth during the 1954-73 period was
quite high by historical standards. As Chart 1 shows, over
the 84 years from 1869 through 1953, per capita real GDP growth
averaged 1.6 percent annually—a rate virtually identical
to that of the 1974-89 period, not that of 1954-73.[3]
More recently, GDP has been recovering
from the 1990-91 recession. After stalling during 1989 and
1990, and subsequently turning down, per capita real GDP hit
a trough in the fourth quarter of 1991.[4] Since then, per
capita real GDP has grown at an average annual rate of 2.5
percent (nearly 3 percent in 1994), well above the 1.6-percent
growth needed to eventually restore GDP to its long-term trend.
In this light, America's recent economic
progress appears much less subpar. Indeed, the country's period
of abnormal growth is arguably the 1950s and '60s, an era
during which the United States rose to the position of dominant
industrial leader of the world, while consumers sought to
catch up from the paucity of the Great Depression and World
War II.[5]
We look next at consumption. Presumably,
consumption, and not production, is the end goal of economic
activity, and it is households' consumption experience from
which their impressions of living standards are formed. The
data show (Chart 1) that consumer spending rose even faster
(2.4 percent) than GDP during the 1950s and 1960s, as the
vast military expenditures of World War II (and later the
Korean War) were steadily pruned from the government's budget.
With labor and industry freed from the yoke of heavy government
control, factories turned to producing cars rather than tanks
and the like, and the share of output going to private consumer
goods rose from 56 percent in 1953 to more than 63 percent
by 1973. And that's not all. Research has found that households
regard about 23 percent of government nondefense spending
as consumption; thus, consumers' effective total share of
production rose from 58 percent in 1953 to nearly 68 percent
by 1973.[6]
In effect, the paring down of military
expenditures from 13.2 percent of GDP in 1953 to 5.7 percent
by 1973 boosted consumption growth by nearly 0.4 percent annually
over those two decades. Clearly, this boost could be transitory,
at best, but it nonetheless helped feed the consumer euphoria
of the era. No such boost was enjoyed subsequently, even with
the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The end of the Cold War
has resulted in a paring down of military expenditures to
4.7 percent of GDP, but that represents a relatively small
gain for consumers.[7] Thus, again, the statistics highlight
the uniqueness of the 1954-73 experience.
With these historical perspectives on
GDP and consumption, America's more recent economic performance
may look less subpar. Still, skeptics cite other statistics
that paint a bleak picture of the nation's recent economic
progress. Chart 2 shows four measures of Americans' monetary
well-being frequently cited by economic reports. These are
per capita personal income, median family income, median household
income and average hourly wages.[8] As the chart shows, one
can preach four distinctly different sermons on Americans'
recent economic progress, depending on the statistic wielded.
For example, per capita real personal income increased by
an average of 1.4 percent a year from 1974 through 1993. During
that same period, on an annual basis, median family income
increased only a tenth of a percentage point, median household
income fell about a tenth of a percentage point, and average
wages fell by one-half a percentage point. This represents
a sharp contrast for four economic series that a lay audience
would generally expect to be interchangeable.
Income, Wages and Total Compensation:
Resolving the Conflict
There are many quirks in economic
statistics that can cause hidden biases when aggregate data
are used to gauge economic progress. Changes in the population's
size, work habits, social habits or age distribution; changes
in the way we get paid; or changes in the goods that we produce
can all cause the interpretation of the economic variables
we measure today to differ from yesterday. The size of the
average U.S. family has declined markedly over the past 20
years, more people participate in the labor force, the average
workweek is shorter, the labor force is younger, employee
benefits are higher, and so on. Such changes distort year-to-year
comparisons of virtually every aggregate statistic, making
comparisons difficult and inviting many different conclusions
from the data. Thus, it is important to sort through this
economic puzzle to determine what's really happening to Americans'
monetary well-being.
For the purpose of comparing today with
yesterday, two of the most severely tainted economic aggregates
are median household income and median family income. Today's
households are nearly 15 percent smaller than yesterday's
(average household size was 3.01 persons in 1973 versus 2.63
today), and, therefore, household income is spread over fewer
people.[9] The upshot is that the household income statistics
significantly understate the true income gains for comparable
households today versus yesterday. Similarly, the median family
income statistics for yesterday's Brady Bunch cannot be compared
with those of today's Murphy Brown with any measure of accuracy.
Also severely tainted are the simple
wage data, their biggest bias being that they ignore employee
benefits.[10] Employee benefits have grown from just 20 percent
of payroll in 1953 to more than 41 percent today. As Chart
3 shows, the proportion of payroll devoted to health benefits
rose from 3 percent in 1953 to more than 14 percent recently.
Retirement and savings benefits went from 5 percent of payroll
in 1953 to 13 percent in 1993. Payments for time not worked,
which includes vacations and holidays, sick leave, military
leave and family leave, went from 7.5 to 11 percent of payroll
over the same period.
Benefits are a form of employee compensation.
Like wages, workers value benefits and even bargain for them.
Indeed, since benefits are often untaxed (or are taxed at
a substantially lower rate than wage income), employees may
be willing to give up more than a dollar in wage income to
receive a dollar's worth of benefits. This means, in terms
of the data, that the rise in employee benefits may have resulted
in a more-than-equal decline in wages, again distorting the
armchair analyst's ability to gauge well-being by looking
simply at the wage data.
Once employee benefits are added to
the raw wage data, the story becomes a bit more optimistic
(Chart 4). As mentioned earlier, from 1974 to 1993, real wages
fell about a half percentage point a year. However, real total
compensation, which includes wages and benefits, rose about
a half percentage point a year. Add to this the fact that
today's labor force is roughly two years younger than that
two decades ago, and the wage gain figures look even less
subpar.[11]
A better gauge of economic well-being
is per capita real personal income. Roughly speaking, per
capita real personal income is the (inflation-adjusted) sum
of all income-related receipts and disbursements—wages,
rents, interest, profits and government transfers, less taxes—per
person in society. It lacks the problems of household and
family income because the economic unit is of a fixed size
(one person), and it lacks the problems of the wage data because
it measures more than simply wage income.
Personal income is essentially just
the payment side of GDP (the main substantive difference being
allowances for depreciation), and it behaves accordingly.
Per capita real personal income grew at a 1.65-percent rate
over the 1974-89 period, virtually identical to the 1.64-percent
growth in per capita real GDP.[12]
Per capita real personal income, though,
is not devoid of hidden distortions, such as those stemming
from changes in the labor force participation rate or annual
hours worked. Over the past two decades the average workweek
has declined by 2.4 hours, and American workers have added
seven days of vacations and holidays annually, yielding roughly
a 180-hour reduction in average time worked per year.[13]
In essence, Americans have taken a portion of their progress
in the form of leisure rather than income, lowering the income
and GDP growth numbers from what they otherwise could have
been.
The Return to Education: Widening
the Income Distribution
One major issue remains: the sharply
slower growth in employee compensation (wages plus benefits)
as compared with income. From 1974 to 1993, total compensation
grew at a 0.7-percent rate, as compared with 1.4 percent for
per capita personal income (Chart 4). In essence, the gap
widened between income and compensation. It should be noted
that data on wages and compensation pertain to only production
and nonsupervisory workers, or about 63 percent of the work
force, whereas the income data cover all workers. The widening
gap tells us that the share of income paid for production
and nonsupervisory work is declining, while the share paid
elsewhere—to professionals, supervisors, managers and
owners—is growing.
One explanation appears to be the rising
return to human capital. In an increasingly information- and
service-oriented economy, business capital has come to encompass
not just physical plant and machinery but, more and more,
intellectual capital as well.[14] As Chart 5 shows, the workers
reaping most of the economic gains have been those at the
higher end of the education spectrum. The income premium to
education is substantial and has grown markedly over the past
two decades. In 1992, college graduates made an average of
82 percent more than high school graduates, up from only 43
percent in 1972. The really big returns to education these
days come with advanced degrees—Ph.D.'s, M.D.'s, J.D.'s,
CPAs and so on. In 1972, people with advanced degrees earned
72 percent more income than high school graduates. By 1992,
they made 2.5 times more. Today, high school dropouts earn
scarcely half as much as high school grads, and the gap is
widening.
Summary
In the public arena, reports can
produce shock waves long before the facts are determined.
Recent economic reports have been no exception. Economic doomsday
stories have proliferated from grossly superficial analyses
based on highly aggregated wage and income statistics. A more
careful examination of the data that takes into account just
a few of the surrounding factors—the increase in employee
benefits, the decline in median household or family size,
the shortening in the average workweek and so on—shows
a generally much less bleak view of Americans' progress in
living standards.[15] Indeed, from the perspective of the
two broadest and most long-term economic aggregates—per
capita real GDP and consumption—Americans' recent gains
are generally right on par with those garnered historically.
The case for alarm thus has little merit.
Aggregate statistics, of course, reflect
averages. Some people have gained more, others less. But one
thing can be said conclusively: the income of the well-educated
has grown substantially faster than that of the less-educated
over the past two decades. Clearly, education is one of the
most effective ways Americans can increase their income potential.
—W. Michael Cox and Beverly J.
Fox
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| Notes
- In 1991, the Department of Commerce switched
from gross national product (GNP) to GDP as
its generally preferred measure of aggregate
economic activity. Chart 1 uses GNP data since
GDP data are not available before 1947. Because
the difference between the GNP and GDP series
is negligible (less than one-tenth of 1 percent
on average), the distinction is unimportant
here and is henceforth ignored.
- The average growth rates of per capita real
GDP during the periods 1869-1953, 1954-73 and
1974-89 were estimated by regressing the log
of per capita real GDP on a constant and time
for each of the three separate periods. The
same is true for consumption, beginning in 1889.
Available GDP data begin in 1869, and consumption
and government purchases data begin in 1889.
The years 1953, 1973 and 1989 were chosen since
they represent business-cycle peaks.
- More precisely, per capita real GDP growth
averaged 1.61 percent, 2.08 percent and 1.64
percent, respectively, over the three successive
periods. Thus, growth during the 1974-89 period
was actually slightly higher than that during
1869-1953.
- Per capita real GDP hit a trough in the fourth
quarter of 1991, later than the official GDP
trough, as the recovery's initial GDP gains
fell short of simple population growth.
- See Wynne (1992a and 1992b).
- The government purchases many different types
of items, from tanks to school lunches. Clearly,
some goods provided publicly—food stamps,
rent subsidies, school lunches, Medicare and
so on—are of a consumer nature and may
be viewed by households as equivalent to those
they could buy privately. Following the research
of Kormendi (1983) and Aschauer (1985), we assume
that approximately 23 percent of government
nondefense purchases are viewed by households
as equivalent to private consumption.
- Growth in total real consumption averaged
1.6 percent annually during the 1889-1953 period
and 1.9 percent during the 1974-89 period but
jumped to over 2.4 percent during 1954-73.
- Each of the series cited henceforth—per
capita personal income, median household income,
median family income, average hourly wages and
total compensation—are deflated using
the CPI-UX1 consumer price index.
- More specifically, the data show that in 1973,
the average household had 1.34 adults (members
age 18 or older) in the labor force, 0.67 adults
not participating in the labor force and one
child. For 1993, these numbers are 1.34, 0.60
and 0.69, respectively.
- Another problem with the wage data is that
they do not measure take-home pay, as affected
by tax rates and transfer payments. Adjustment
for these factors is beyond the scope of this
article.
- As the age of the work force declines, so
does the level of experience and, hence, income
and wages, yet the aggregate measures unavoidably
conceal this change. We make no attempt to adjust
for the age factor here.
- See note 3.
- See Cox and Alm (1994) for more details.
- See Cox and Alm (1995) for a broad examination
of the growth of the service sector and what
it portends.
- Two other major income data adjustments needed
are for taxes (and transfers) and improvements
in product quality. The Department of Labor
recently began an extensive study to determine
the extent (if any) to which price indexes are
overstated due to an underrecognition of the
gains in product quality. Overstatement of inflation
would be tantamount to understatement of the
gains in virtually every series on Americans'
monetary well-being—real GDP, consumption,
wages, compensation and income.
References
Aschauer, David Alan
(1985), "Fiscal Policy and Aggregate Demand,"
American Economic Review 75 (March):
117-27.
Cox, W. Michael, and Richard
Alm (1995), "The Service Sector: Give It
Some Respect," in Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas Annual Report, 3-22.
———Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas Annual Report,
2-15.
Kormendi, Roger C. (1983),
"Government Debt, Government Spending, and
Private Behavior," American Economic
Review 73 (December): 994-1010.
Wynne, Mark A. (1992a),
"The Comparative Growth Performance of the
U.S. Economy in the Postwar Period," Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic Review,
First Quarter, 1-16.
——— (1992b),
"How Serious Is the Productivity Problem
in the U.S.?" Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Southwest Economy, May/June, 1-3. |
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Beyond
the Border
The Tequila Effect
By devaluing its currency on December
20, 1994, Mexico inadvertently initiated what Latin America
has started to call "the tequila effect" and what
Michel Camdessus, managing director of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), has dubbed "the first financial crisis of
the 21st century."
Effects of Mexico's peso devaluation
rippled through the financial markets of the so-called emerging
economies with unexpected intensity. It hit the stock markets
of Poland, Turkey, South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong, but
especially those of Latin America. By the end of February,
Argentina's stock market had dropped 32.1 percent, Brazil's
33.6 percent and Peru's 28.7 percent.
It appears as if on December 21 investors
lost the optimism toward Latin American economies they'd had
just the day before. Mexico's large current account deficit
and government short-term debt may have been harbingers of
the Mexican crisis. But what followed in the rest of Latin
America defies explanation in terms of macroeconomic indicators.
Since 1990, the economies of Argentina,
Brazil and Peru have been growing two or more times faster
than Mexico's (Table 1). Besides gross domestic product (GDP)
growth, the current account balance as a percentage of GDP
is another important gauge of economic performance because
it measures a country's ability to repay its foreign debt.
When this rate exceeds the rate of growth of the economy for
a sustained period, an external debt crisis may be mounting.
Of the economies listed in Table 1, none but Mexico's has
consistently crossed this threshold. Nor have the four other
economies had Mexico's high concentration of short-term government
debt (Table 2).
Why, then, are investors reacting in
the same way to countries with different economic fundamentals?
It is difficult to explain this tequila effect without taking
two factors into account. First, financial links among the
economies of Latin America were much more intertwined than
most analysts initially thought, and second, the Mexican exchange
rate crisis caught many Latin American economies in the middle
of very deep and radical structural reforms.
One of the countries most adversely
affected, Argentina, was implementing several new financial
policies, including a new convertibility law and a complete
overhaul of the financial sector. Under the convertibility
law, the central bank of Argentina can "print" one
peso only if it receives one additional dollar (or its equivalent
in other hard currencies). This law severely limits the central
bank's ability to act as a lender of last resort or to provide
deposit insurance (bailing out financial institutions or depositors
by printing money would violate the convertibility law). The
Achilles' heel of this law is that, without a lender of last
resort, the fear of a bank run could trigger one. For that
reason, in early 1994 Argentina introduced regulatory changes
in its financial system, with the ultimate goal of achieving
full compliance of all its financial institutions with the
international capital standards outlined in the Basle Accord.
The peso devaluation disrupted this process—to the extent
that a financial institution heavily exposed in Mexican government
bonds and securities became insolvent as the price of those
assets fell. The fear of a generalized bank run, preemptive
withdrawals, capital outflows and reallocation of funds among
financial institutions that followed forced Argentina to request
the assistance of the IMF and to adopt fiscal austerity measures
that in the absence of the tequila effect wouldn't have been
needed to sustain its convertibility law of a 1:1 peso-dollar
exchange rate.
The tequila spillover didn't stop in
Argentina. Brazil, also in the midst of overhauling its financial
system, is one of Argentina's strongest trading partners.
Fear of a crisis in one country quickly transfers to the other.
Unlike Argentina, Brazil could not support the speculative
attack against its currency and was forced to devalue. Chile's
economy is also highly integrated with Argentina's. Over the
past four years, more than two-thirds of all Chilean investment
abroad has gone to Argentina. These economic and financial
links may explain why Chile's stock market began to weaken
in March 1995 as well.
However valid these ex post wisdom explanations,
Tables 1 and 2 suggest important objective differences between
the Mexican economy and those of other Latin American countries.
Why, then, have domestic and foreign investors alike treated
them with the same lack of confidence? Perhaps the answer
lies in their common, pre-1990s past: a long history of huge
budget deficits, runaway inflation, protectionist policies,
even default on foreign debt payments. To some investors,
Latin American economies may look like a consumer who has
recently filed for bankruptcy. A tainted credit history limits
a person's access to credit, especially in times of financial
turmoil and scarce capital.
Countries, like consumers, need sound
economic policies for quite some time to clean up their credit
records. During periods of reform, a country runs the risk
that any setback will be attributed to its reforms, and not
to the unfortunate timing that may catch the country half-way
into a process it failed to adopt much earlier. Along with
technical expertise and political goodwill, successful reform
may require a bit of lucky timing. If so, the solution to
temporary setbacks is to keep reforms intact so opportunity
will find these economies ready the next time it arises. Chile
did exactly that in 1982, despite a financial crisis and a
14-percent decline in GDP. The reward: a "Latin American
tiger," with 1983-94 average annual GDP growth per capita
of 4.6 percent.
—Carlos E. Zarazaga
Regional
Update
1994 was another strong year for the
Eleventh District (Texas, northern Louisiana and southern
New Mexico). For the sixth consecutive year, employment grew
faster in all three District states than in the nation as
a whole.[1] Louisiana and New Mexico outpaced national growth
in all major industrial categories. Texas grew faster than
the nation in all major categories except mining, which lost
jobs. Such broad-based growth illustrates the Southwest's
appeal to all types of firms as a low-cost/low-wage region.
Other factors also contributed to the
region's relative strength. Proximity to Mexico made the Southwest
a major beneficiary of NAFTA. The finance, insurance and real
estate (FIRE) sector grew strongly despite weak employment
growth nationally, and state and local government employment
in District states grew at twice the national rate.
State-by-State Highlights
Louisiana. Casino
gambling appears to be paying off for Louisiana, at least
in the short run. In 1994, employment directly linked to riverboat
gambling (hotels, amusements and water transportation) grew
nearly 25 percent, accounting for one-sixth of the state's
employment growth. Some of this growth may have come at the
expense of Texas' tourism industries, which lost 3,400 jobs
in 1994.
New Mexico. New
Mexico has the region's fastest growing manufacturing and
construction sectors. Manufacturing employment grew 5.5 percent
in 1994, led by strong growth in the electronic and electrical
equipment industry. Demand from the manufacturing sector helped
generate double- digit growth in construction employment and
nonresidential construction contract values.
Texas. Texas
appears to have profited from its position as a distribution
hub and its efforts to deregulate intrastate trucking. Employment
in railroad transportation and trucking and warehousing grew
nearly 10 percent in 1994.
—Lori L. Taylor
| Note
- Based on job growth from December to December
each year.
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| 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
Reserve System.
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a copy is provided to the Research Department
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Southwest Economy
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