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Issue 4, July/August 2000
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Oil Prices and the Economy
Since it first bubbled from the ground
in Pennsylvania in 1859, oil has affected the economy. And
since its inception in 1960, OPEC has shaped oil prices. Do
oil and OPEC still have a strong hold on the economy? This
article examines oil-price movements from a long-term perspective
and assesses the consequences for economic activity.
It seems we have less reason to be
concerned about higher oil prices today. Even though oil prices
tripled over the past 18 months, they are moderate by historical
standards. Given its market share, large reserves and low
production costs, OPEC will remain dominant in world oil markets.
Both the national and regional economies have diversified
away from energy-intensive and energy-producing industries.
Consequently, our economy is less sensitive to oil-price changes.
Still, a dramatic and persistent increase in oil prices would
slow the U.S. economy while stimulating the economies of energy-producing
states.
World Oil Market
OPEC has been a major factor in
the recent volatility of oil prices, with help from fluctuating
world demand. Prices dropped to a low of about $11 per barrel
in the last week of 1998, then climbed to a 10-year high of
$34 in early March of this year. The tripling of crude oil
prices over the past 18 months reflects greater-than-anticipated
demand and decreased supply. Mexico, Norway, Russia and Oman
agreed to cut output along with OPEC, pushing prices up. This
increase resembles the 1979–1981 price hike, which led
to a severe recession (Chart 1).
When adjusted for inflation, however,
crude prices are about the same as they were in the early
1970s and much lower than in the early 1980s. Prices doubled
to near $10 per barrel in early 1974. In today's dollars that
is equivalent to $33 per barrel. The high of $38 reached in
1981 would be $72 today. Similarly, for gasoline prices to
reach the highs of the early 1980s, they would have to average
$2.55 per gallon nationally. The current national average
price is about $1.50 per gallon.
The United States is a mature oil-producing
region. Our production peaked in 1970 and has been declining
since (Chart 2). In 1970, U.S. production was about 20 percent
of world oil output. Today U.S. output is about 10 percent.
OPEC's share has also declined from about 50 percent of world
output in 1970, but it is still a hefty 40 percent today.
When Russia, Norway and Mexico decided to join OPEC in cutting
output last year, these countries produced 60 percent of world
output.
Although the United States contributes
about 10 percent of world output, we consume 22 percent; hence,
we import about 55 percent of what we consume. As the U.S.
economy grows and domestic oil production declines, this percentage
will rise. A high dependency on imported oil is not necessarily
a bad thing. Japan and many European countries import 100
percent of their oil. Because a major share of world oil production
comes from politically unstable parts of the world, however,
imported oil may pose political and security risks. World
dependence on oil from OPEC, which holds 65 percent of world
reserves, will continue into the future (Chart 3).
OPEC recently decided to keep the price
of oil in a band that would correspond to $25–$30 per
barrel for West Texas Intermediate crude oil (Chart 4). OPEC
will increase production if prices go above $30 for 20 days
and reduce production if prices fall below $25. OPEC does
not consider a price above $30 sustainable because such a
price leads to oil conservation and an increase in non-OPEC
supply. A price below $25 is bad for OPEC finances. It is
estimated that for each $1 drop in the price of oil, Saudi
Arabia loses $2.5 billion in annual revenue.
Oil Prices and U.S. Economic Activity
A considerable body of economic
research suggests that oil-price fluctuations have figured
prominently in national economic activity since World War
II. (For examples, see Hamilton 1983; Balke, Brown and Yücel
1999; and Brown and Yücel 1999). Oil's influence on the
economy may be weakening, however.
Rising oil prices preceded eight of
the nine post–World War II recessions (Chart 5). The
1960 recession is the one exception. A small price hike preceded
the recession in 1970. In the 1950s and 1960s, the economy
was so sensitive to oil prices that small price increases
led recessions. Since the mid-1980s, rising oil prices have
not always led recessions. Oil-price fluctuations seem to
have less effect on economic activity today than in the past.
Rising oil prices can be indicative
of a classic supply-side shock (Brown and Yücel 1999),
signaling increased scarcity of energy, a basic input to production.
Consequently, output and productivity growth slow. The decline
in productivity lessens real wage growth and increases the
unemployment rate at which inflation accelerates. Under a
monetary policy that maintains a constant nominal GDP, the
price level rises by the amount GDP falls. If consumers expect
the increase in oil price to be temporary, they will attempt
to save less or borrow to smooth out their consumption. This
will boost interest rates.
Research by Carruth, Hooker and Oswald
(1998) shows a strong relationship between oil prices and
the unemployment rate. Changing oil prices led movements in
the unemployment rate from the 1970s through the 1990s (Chart
6). Unemployment declined with oil prices from 1982 through
1990 and in the late 1990s. Rising oil prices retard productivity
growth and raise the rate of unemployment at which inflation
accelerates. Falling oil prices stimulate productivity growth
and lower the rate of unemployment at which inflation accelerates.
The chart suggests this relationship weakened in the late
1990s, as the economy increasingly turned away from energy-intensive
industries and toward the high-tech industries that characterize
the new economy.
Economic research suggests that rising
oil prices contribute to inflationary pressures (Chart 7).
(For examples, see Balke, Brown and Yücel 1999; Brown
and Yücel 1999). This relationship was obscured somewhat
in the 1970s, however, when U.S. inflation appeared to lead
increases in the price of oil. A rising U.S. price level put
downward pressure on the real value of the dollar in international
exchange. The weaker dollar boosted the dollar-denominated
demand for oil and helped push oil prices upward. At the same
time, OPEC sought to maintain the purchasing power of its
oil exports by increasing the price.
In the early 1980s, U.S. disinflation
reversed the process. Since the mid1980s, however, movements
in inflation and oil prices have roughly coincided. We have
also seen a weaker link between rising oil prices and core
inflation—that is, inflation in all items except food
and energy. This measure of inflation is thought to provide
a better signal of underlying inflationary pressure because
it is less susceptible to the fluctuations associated with
food and energy prices. A recent study (Hooker 2000) on oil
prices and inflation shows that, since 1980, oil-price changes
have had little effect on core inflation. Before 1980, though,
oil shocks contributed substantially to core inflation. The
weaker link suggests monetary policy may have been more effective
in combating the inflationary effects of oil-price shocks
in the past 20 years.
Nevertheless, rising oil prices seem
to lead to higher interest rates (Chart 8). If consumers see
oil-price increases as temporary, as is suggested by futures
prices, they will also consider the loss of output and income
associated with higher oil prices to be temporary. To smooth
their consumption across periods of lower income, consumers
will attempt to save less or borrow, which will boost interest
rates.
Some of the recent increases in the
federal funds rate may be part of a general increase in interest
rates that results from higher oil prices (Brown and Yücel
1999). To the extent the Federal Reserve does not allow the
federal funds rate to rise with these increases in market
interest rates, inflation would be more evident in the core
measure of inflation.
One reason recent oil-price hikes may
have had less negative impact on the national economy is that
the amount of energy consumed in producing each dollar of
GDP has declined. As Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
has said, "Today's GDP is lighter and smaller."
However, this development is not new. The largest declines
in energy consumption per dollar of GDP came during the 1970s
through early 1980s, when oil prices were rising rapidly (Chart
9). The declines slowed after oil prices collapsed in 1986.
Our informal calculations suggest the U.S. economy is about
one-third less sensitive to oil-price fluctuations today than
it was when oil prices were at their height in the early 1980s.
Our calculations also suggest the U.S. economy is about half
as sensitive to oil-price fluctuations as it was in the mid-1970s,
when real oil prices were about the same as they are today.
Oil Prices and Economic Activity
in the Southwest
As the national economy has diversified
away from energy-intensive industries, Texas has moved away
from energy production. Texas' diversification is evident
in its gross state product data. In 1981, the oil and natural
gas sector accounted for about 20 percent of gross state product.
In 1997—the most recent year for which we have data—oil
and natural gas production accounted for about 8 percent of
gross state product (Chart 10).
Because the energy industry is less
prominent in the state, Texas employment is about 75 percent
less sensitive to oil-price movements today than it was in
1982. Similarly, employment in Louisiana and Oklahoma is about
80 percent less sensitive, and New Mexico employment is about
70 percent less sensitive (Chart 11).
We estimate that rising oil prices
would have hurt economic activity in 37 states and the District
of Columbia in 1982, as shown in Chart 12 (Brown and Yücel
1995). For the other 13 states, rising oil prices would have
boosted economic activity in 1982.
At the present (2000), only eight states
are helped by rising oil prices. Economic activity in Kansas,
Mississippi, Montana, Utah and West Virginia has changed so
much that these states are now hurt by rising oil prices rather
than helped, as they were in 1982. More important, nearly
all state economies that would have been hurt or helped by
rising oil prices in 1982 are now less sensitive to oil-price
increases. Diversification away from both energy-intensive
industries and energy production is making the states more
alike in their responses to oil-price movements.
—Stephen P. A. Brown and Mine
K. Yücel
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| About the Authors
Brown is director of energy
economics and microeconomic policy analysis and
Yücel is a senior economist and research
officer in the Research Department of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas.
References
Balke, Nathan S., Stephen
P. A. Brown, and Mine K. Yücel (1999), "Oil
Price Shocks and the U.S. Economy: Where Does
the Asymmetry Originate?" Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas Research Paper no. 99-11 (Dallas,
December).
Brown, Stephen P. A., and
Mine K. Yücel (1995), "Energy Prices
and State Economic Performance," Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic Review,
Second Quarter, 13–23.
——— (1999),
"Oil Prices and U.S. Aggregate Economic Activity:
A Question of Neutrality," Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas Economic and Financial Review,
Second Quarter, 16–23.
Carruth, Alan, Mark Hooker,
and Andrew Oswald (1998), "Unemployment Equilibria
and Input Prices: Theory and Evidence from the
United States," Review of Economics and
Statistics 80 (November): 621–28.
Hamilton, James D. (1983),
"Oil and the Macroeconomy Since World War
II," Journal of Political Economy
91 (April): 228–48.
Hooker, Mark (2000), "Are
Oil Shocks Inflationary? Asymmetric and Nonlinear
Specifications" (Paper presented at the Western
Economic Association Conference, Vancouver, B.C.,
July 2). |
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Some
Pleasant Economic Side Effects
By virtually every popular measure,
the U.S. economy is performing better today than in decades.
Between October 1999 and March 2000, GDP grew at an annualized
6.3 percent and productivity at 4.6 percent. The next month,
the expansion was a record 109 months long and unemployment
hit a 30-year low of 3.9 percent. The nation has added an
average of 162,000 jobs per month since the expansion began.
Just about every commonly cited statistic
says that U.S. living standards have risen markedly over the
past decade. With more Americans earning more money than ever
before, people can afford to consume more, save more—or
both. Perhaps more important, it has never been easier for
ordinary Americans to find work or move to a better job.
Yet there are other ways—less
celebrated but no less important—the strong economy
has improved the everyday lives of ordinary people. Among
these pleasant side effects are those on crime, welfare, charity,
the budget deficit and minority well-being. The current expansion
began in March 1991. But because America has had only eight
months of recession since 1982, it can be seen as the second
installment in a long boom that began about 210 months ago.
Crime
Estimates of the annual cost of
crime in the United States range as high as $1 trillion.[1]
Many factors influence an individual's decision to commit
crimes: the likelihood of being caught, the severity of punishment
and the potential reward, to name a few. But high on the list
are the job and income prospects one faces in pursuing lawful
work. Research shows that economic incentives play a key role
in influencing crime, just as they do in many other decisions
in life.[2] So it makes sense that crime rates, especially
those economically linked—robbery, burglary, larceny
and motor vehicle theft, for example—fell in the 1990s
(Chart 1).[3]
What's remarkable about the decline
is that all major types of crimes fell sharply. While non-economic
factors such as demographic changes and more prisons can gradually
reduce crime rates over time, what's remarkable about the
1990s is the sharp decline in virtually all major types of
crime. Crime in every category has declined each year since
the current expansion began, with the exception of small one-year
increases in murder (1993) and larceny (1995). Declines have
been so substantial that most types of crime are less prevalent
now than they were in 1970. During the current expansion,
robbery has fallen by 46 percent, murder by 45 percent, burglary
by 41 percent, motor vehicle theft by 39 percent and larceny-theft
by 23 percent.[4] These numbers show that one pleasant side
effect of the nation's long economic boom has been a substantial
reduction in crime.
Welfare
Since the social safety net was
created in 1936, numerous programs have been established to
assist out-of-work Americans. As conceived, the nation's welfare
system would rescue unfortunate but well-intended citizens
from occasional hard times. In practice, however, the system
also created incentives for able-bodied and otherwise competent
individuals to opt out of the labor market in return for welfare
benefits—cash, food and food vouchers, medical care,
rent subsidies and others.
While America's growing economy has
been providing ever-greater incentives for individuals to
work, for those in some categories (such as the less skilled),
an increasingly generous welfare system has been providing
incentives to seek social welfare. By 1994, the number of
Americans receiving cash welfare payments had reached an all-time
high of 14.2 million, or 5.5 percent of the population (Chart
2).
Two factors changed the welfare cost–benefit
calculus: the landmark welfare reform law enacted in 1996
and the prolonged economic expansion. It is difficult to pinpoint
how much of the decline is due to the current expansion, and
the General Accounting Office credits both factors for reducing
welfare recipiency. As Chart 2 shows, however, the welfare
rolls began to fall roughly three years into the expansion,
two and a half years before welfare reform was signed into
law.
The decline in welfare recipiency has
been broad-based, touching every state. Looking at recipiency
on a region-by-region basis provides further evidence that
economic growth has helped cut welfare rolls (Chart 3). Regions
with the greatest percentage decline in per capita recipiency
in the '90s tended to be those with greater percentage growth
in median per capita real income.[5]
The fraction of Americans on welfare
has declined by well over half—from 5.5 percent in 1994
to 2.5 percent in 1999. Welfare rolls are down by 53 percent
over that period—from 14.2 million in 1994 to 6.8 million
in 1999. Of course, the strong economy can't eliminate the
need for welfare. But fewer Americans are on welfare today
than at any time since 1967—clearly another pleasant
side effect of the nation's long boom.
Charity
In recent years, stories of self-absorbed
millionaires and Internet billionaires have convinced many
that Americans have abandoned their commitment to charity.
The data, however, provide evidence that Americans are contributing
more than ever.
To gauge the extent of increased giving,
it's helpful to compare the growth in giving per capita over
the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. The years 1970, 1982 and 1991
are business cycle peaks, so it makes sense to calculate and
compare the growth in real giving per capita over three periods:
1970–82, 1982–91 and 1991–99.
The data show that real per capita
contributions to charity declined at an average annual rate
of 0.2 percent from 1970 to 1982, then rose at an annual average
of 1.2 percent during the expansion of the 1980s. Since 1991,
however, real per capita charitable contributions have grown
at an annual average of 4 percent (Chart 4).[6]
More recent data show an even stronger
increase in giving. Since 1995, total real charitable contributions
have grown 9 percent annually, rising from $135.9 billion
to $191.7 billion in 1999. Real giving per capita has risen
8.4 percent annually over the period. Real contributions from
individuals—the biggest category of giving—have
grown 7.1 percent annually, rising to $750 per adult. Other
forms of charity have grown even faster, with foundations
upping their contributions by 17 percent in 1999 alone. Roughly
half of all charitable contributions in the 1990s went to
religious organizations such as churches, but the fastest-growing
types of charities deal with social issues, such as environmental
concerns.
From these data, it is clear a charitable
renaissance is under way, powered in large part by the strong
economy.
The Budget Deficit
The federal budget deficit has
caused concern for more than three decades. Since 1969, the
government has amassed debt of over $5 trillion. In the first
full year of the current expansion (1992), the deficit reached
a record $290.4 billion, and many analysts expected deficits
in excess of $400 billion annually by the end of the decade.
But although federal spending has grown by about 4 percent
annually since 1992, the budget has moved into surplus. Current
projections call for a surplus of almost $200 billion in fiscal
2000 and an end to the federal debt by 2013, or even 2009.[7]
The primary factor improving fiscal
balance has been income tax revenues, which rose from $468
billion in 1991 to $880 billion in 1999 (Chart 5). This increase
is largely due to growth in personal income, which expanded
from $5 trillion in 1991 to almost $8 trillion last year.
However, effective income tax rates have climbed, too. Between
1991 and 1999, the average citizen's federal income tax bite
rose from 9.2 percent to 11.3 percent—a 23 percent increase.
How did this happen? Part of the answer
lies in a 1993 tax hike, but part is due to the way the tax
system handles growth. A little-known aspect of the tax code
is that real economic growth raises the proportion of income
subject to taxes—and pushes people into higher tax brackets
in the process. This means average Americans don't just pay
more taxes when times are good, they actually pay a higher
percentage of their income. Bracket creep isn't something
that just happens to individuals when they get better jobs.
It's designed into current national policy by a code that
adjusts tax brackets only for inflation, not for real economic
growth.[8]
Owing partly to the effects of strong
economic growth on real taxable income, the average income
tax rate rose significantly in the 1990s. But while we can
lament a tax policy that shifts an ever-greater portion of
society's output to government as economic growth proceeds,
we can also celebrate the growth that has helped reduce government
red ink.
Minority Well-Being
Historically, most minorities have
fared worse than whites on standard measures of economic well-being.
Average wages earned by blacks and Hispanics have generally
fallen short of those earned by whites. Unemployment rates
among blacks and Hispanics have lingered well above those
of whites. And poverty has plagued the minority population.
Has the recent economic expansion helped
minorities? Since 1993, the poverty rate has dropped considerably
among Americans of all races, especially minorities. From
its 1990s peak of 7.6 percent (in 1993), the poverty rate
among white non-Hispanic families fell to 6.1 percent by 1998.[9]
Among blacks, the drop has been greater, with the rate declining
from 31.3 percent to 23.4 percent—a nearly 8 percentage
point drop. Poverty rates among Hispanic families fell from
27.3 percent to 22.7 percent over this period, which is especially
remarkable given the large number of poor Hispanics who migrated
to the United States in the 1990s.
The minority unemployment picture is
even better. During America's long boom, overall unemployment
has fallen from its 1980s high (in 1982) of 9.7 percent to
a 1990s high of 7.5 percent (in 1992) to 3.9 percent in April
2000. Unemployment rate gaps, however, have shown steeper
declines (Chart 6). The gap between black and white unemployment
rates narrowed from 10.3 percent in 1982 to 6.4 percent in
1991 and 3.7 percent in April. The Hispanic–white gap
went from 5.2 percent in 1982 to 3.9 percent in 1991 and 1.9
percent in April.
Minorities have faced many obstacles
in the 20th century. But after nearly two decades of strong
economic growth, falling unemployment rates and intensifying
global competition, these obstacles have lessened. Minorities
have seized the opportunities the New Economy affords to narrow
the gap with the broader population and provide a better standard
of living for themselves and their families—another
pleasant side effect of the strong economy.
—Jason L. Saving and W. Michael
Cox
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| About the Authors
Saving is an economist
in the Research Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas, and Cox is senior vice president
and chief economist.
Notes
- See David A. Anderson, "The Aggregate
Burden of Crime," Journal of Law and
Economics, October 1999, pp. 611–42.
- The seminal article on the subject is Gary
S. Becker, "Crime and Punishment: An Economic
Approach," Journal of Political Economy,
March/April 1968, pp. 169–217. More recent
work that confirms the importance of economic
factors to criminal behavior is Ralph C. Allen
and Jack H. Stone, "Market and Public Policy
Mechanisms in Poverty Reduction: The Differential
Effects of Property Crime," Review of Social
Economy, June 1999, pp. 156–73.
- Both homicide and forcible rape have also
declined since 1992. Although initially one
might view these crimes as unrelated to the
economy, there is good reason to believe they
might be indirectly linked to job and income
prospects. Working citizens have less time to
commit crime, and they are apt to feel more
included in society, less frustrated and marginalized
and therefore less antisocial.
- The rate of motor vehicle theft continued
downward in the 1990s, but it has been in decline
since the early 1980s. In some cases, technologies
introduced since the early 1980s have likely
reduced crime as much as the economic expansion
has. Examples are car alarms and home security
systems, largely unavailable until the early
1980s but now found in nearly a quarter of U.S.
residences and vehicles.
- The regions in the article and Chart 3 are
the standard nine U.S. Census divisions.
- The figures used here are real giving per
adult to help control for demographic changes.
- The $200 billion includes a $40 billion non-Social
Security surplus.
- Under the tax code, all Americans could be
in the 39.6 percent tax bracket someday. The
obvious solution is to change the way tax brackets
are indexed. Tax brackets could be raised by
the full extent of nominal income growth annually,
not just the portion due to higher prices.
- Data are the most recent available.
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Beyond
the Border
U.S.–China Trade Relations: The Best of Both Worlds
This year's biggest trade battle so
far has been over permanent normal trade relations between
the United States and China. The U.S. House of Representatives
voted in May to permanently normalize trade relations, paving
the way for China's membership in the World Trade Organization.
The issue is now before the U.S. Senate. The vote has sparked
controversy, perhaps because the details of the WTO accession
agreement are not well understood. The most striking detail
of the agreement, which is essentially a work in progress,
is that the United States does very little in exchange for
much reduction in China's protectionism.
This one-sided liberalization is not
unusual. In trade agreements between the United States and
developing countries, the latter do most of the liberalizing.
The reason is simple. The United States is already more open
to imports, foreign investment and international trade in
services than many other countries, especially developing
ones. In the China–U.S. agreement, U.S. tariffs do not
go down, and other types of trade protectionism are generally
not reduced either. Important from the Chinese perspective,
however, is the United States' commitment to make permanent
the trade privileges it has been extending to China one year
at a time.
Chinese tariffs do come down. Chinese
industrial tariffs are at an average ad valorem value of 24.6
percent. The average will fall to 9.4 percent. Despite this
large reduction, average Chinese tariffs are markedly higher
than those of industrial countries. According to some estimates,
the average industrial tariff among the WTO member nations
is under 4 percent. While China's trade reduction is important,
it is not NAFTA. The WTO is not a free trade organization.
In addition to tariff reductions, China
will reduce nontariff barriers. Import quotas will be phased
out. Import licensing will ebb. Government monopolies on the
importation of some products will fade, as will government
decrees that only certain enterprises may import products
the government itself doesn't monopolize. Arcane government
purchasing programs—essentially "buy China"
programs—will be made transparent and opened to foreigners.
Foreign investment rules will also
change. Foreign firms will not have to agree to local content
requirements, technology transfer requirements or minimum
export requirements. Some of the biggest openings involve
trade in services rather than in goods. Retailing and wholesaling,
from which foreigners have been excluded up to now, will be
opened. Foreign firms will be permitted to hold up to 50 percent
interest in telecommunications operations. Right now in China,
foreign banking operations can only do business with foreign
firms and in designated locations. By the time the accession
is five years old, foreign banks will be able to do business
in Chinese currency with both Chinese companies and individual
customers at any geographic location. This is a significant
opening.
The results of the U.S.–China
negotiations last November are only part of a larger agreement—China's
accession to the WTO. WTO membership means not only trade
openings for China but also access to the organization's dispute
settlement mechanisms. China will no longer be subjected to
arbitrary unilateral decisions involving so-called administrative
protectionism, such as antidumping. Administrative protectionism
exists within the WTO framework, but this protectionism is
more fully rationalized than that experienced by countries
in some bilateral relationships.
The WTO agreement includes tariff
and nontariff reductions that will be "multilateralized."
This means each of the bilateral agreements reached between
China and every other country in the WTO will be merged.
The best deal that China gives
to any particular country will, in the merged agreement,
be extended to all the WTO countries. Thus, the agreement
between
the United States and China can only get better.
—William C. Gruben
| About the Author
Gruben is vice president
and the director of the Center for Latin American
Economics at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
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Regional
Update
The Texas economy has cooled slightly
from a strong first quarter but remains more robust than a
year ago. High energy prices and continued strength in the
high-tech sector have combined to sustain economic growth
in recent months. Anecdotal evidence suggests, however, that
higher interest rates are slowing construction activity.
Crude prices remained high throughout
June at around $30 per barrel. Oil exploration and extraction
continue to increase in response to the price rise. The Texas
rotary rig count has increased at an annual rate of 43.4 percent
since the beginning of 2000.
Manufacturing activity expanded in
April and May. Productivity gains and extended working hours
led to output growth of 4.7 percent (annual rate) over the
two-month period. Manufacturing employment grew at a strong
2.7 percent in May after declining for most of the past year.
Construction activity is showing signs
of cooling from a very strong pace. Nonresidential construction
contract values declined in May. Growth of residential sales
slowed from an annual rate of 20.1 percent in April to 5.5
percent in May. Construction employment declined by 700 jobs
in May after posting strong growth the first four months of
this year.
The Texas labor market remains very
tight and was further squeezed by the hiring of census workers.
The Texas unemployment rate dropped from 4.5 percent in April
to 4.4 percent in May. The energy, manufacturing and service
sectors have all reported difficulty in increasing and maintaining
payroll levels.
After rising in February and March,
the Texas leading index fell in April and May. This dampening
in the leading index suggests a possible cooling in employment
growth over the next six months.
—John Thompson
| 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.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited and
a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the Public
Affairs Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas,
P.O. Box 655906, Dallas, TX 75265-5906, or by
telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
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