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Issue 2, March/April 2002
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Regional Update
Ten years of economic expansion came
to an end in 2001. Economic activity in Texas slowed throughout
2000 and turned negative in the spring of 2001, dragged down
by the national and Mexican recessions and by the shock of
September 11.
It may be too soon to feel confident
that the recession is over. However, signs are increasingly
positive. The U.S. economy's unexpected strength raises the
prospects for a quick recovery, both in Texas and in Mexico.
The Texas Leading Index has been climbing for the past four
months, led by sharp increases in the U.S. leading index,
the Texas Stock Index and average weekly hours worked in Texas
manufacturing and by a decline in initial unemployment claims
in Texas. After declining for most of 2001, private nonfarm
employment in Texas surged in January. Despite falling back
slightly in February, the private sector has added 23,000
jobs since the start of the year.
These numbers paint a very different
picture of the Texas economy than was presented in the last
issue of Southwest Economy. The Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) has just revised (in some cases substantially) all of
the state-level employment data from second quarter 2000 forward.
The difference between the unrevised and the revised data
for December 2001 exceeds 2 percent of employment in five
states—North Carolina, South Carolina, Washington, Florida
and Texas. Where we once thought that Texas employment grew
1 percent in 2001, we now know it shrank 1 percent. After
the revisions, the BLS lopped 215,000 jobs out of the Texas
employment estimate for December 2001. The Texas revisions
were proportionately most extreme in the wholesale trade and
temporary employment industries.
—Lori L. Taylor
| Regional Economic Indicators |
| |
Texas Leading Index
|
TIPI† total
|
|
2/02
|
—
|
—
|
|
1/02
|
115.4
|
126.7
|
|
12/01
|
114.2
|
125.3
|
|
11/01
|
114.3
|
126.9
|
|
10/01
|
113.0
|
127.7
|
|
9/01
|
114.4
|
129.8
|
|
8/01
|
119.5
|
130.6
|
|
7/01
|
118.4
|
131.5
|
|
6/01
|
118.9
|
131.5
|
|
5/01
|
119.8
|
131.0
|
|
4/01
|
118.8
|
131.0
|
|
3/01
|
120.1
|
131.1
|
|
| † Texas Industrial Production Index. |
| Texas Employment* |
| |
Mining
|
Construction |
Manufacturing |
Government |
Private
service-
producing
|
|
2/02
|
161.4 |
559.2 |
1,018.4
|
1,607.0 |
6,118.3 |
|
1/02
|
161.7 |
561.1 |
1,024.8
|
1,603.4 |
6,112.3 |
|
12/01
|
161.9 |
559.7 |
1,024.5
|
1,597.2 |
6,088.3 |
|
11/01
|
162.7 |
559.4 |
1,027.9 |
1,594.4 |
6,101.5 |
|
10/01
|
163.0 |
559.0 |
1,033.1 |
1,592.7 |
6,111.3 |
|
9/01
|
163.7
|
561.4
|
1,038.9 |
1,592.4 |
6,127.3 |
|
8/01
|
164.5 |
564.0 |
1,047.6 |
1,584.3 |
6,148.4 |
|
7/01
|
164.1 |
561.7 |
1,053.0 |
1,584.9 |
6,144.7 |
|
6/01
|
164.2 |
565.6 |
1,063.0
|
1,584.2 |
6,161.0 |
|
5/01
|
162.7 |
567.8 |
1,070.1 |
1,578.8 |
6,173.6 |
|
4/01
|
161.3 |
567.5 |
1,075.3 |
1,576.6 |
6,172.7 |
|
3/01
|
158.4 |
570.8 |
1,081.4 |
1,574.6 |
6,174.8 |
|
| * In thousands. |
| Total Nonfarm Employment* |
| |
Texas
|
Louisiana
|
New Mexico
|
|
2/02
|
9,464.3 |
— |
— |
|
1/02
|
9,463.3 |
1,920.3 |
762.2 |
|
12/01
|
9,431.6 |
1,925.5 |
758.3 |
|
11/01
|
9,445.9 |
1,925.7 |
758.1 |
|
10/01
|
9,459.1 |
1,926.7 |
758.5 |
|
9/01
|
9,483.7 |
1,924.0 |
756.3 |
|
8/01
|
9,508.8 |
1,928.2 |
756.3 |
|
7/01
|
9,508.4 |
1,925.4 |
756.4 |
|
6/01
|
9,538.0 |
1,927.0 |
757.5 |
|
5/01
|
9,553.0 |
1,927.6 |
757.3 |
|
4/01
|
9,553.4 |
1,927.4 |
755.9 |
|
3/01
|
9,560.0 |
1,924.6 |
757.7 |
|
| * In thousands. |
For more information on employment
data, see "Reassessing Texas Employment Growth" (Southwest
Economy, July/August 1993). For TIPI, see "The Texas
Industrial Production Index" (Dallas Fed Economic Review,
November 1989). For the Texas Leading Index and its components,
see "The Texas Index of Leading Indicators: A Revision
and Further Evaluation" (Dallas Fed Economic Review,
July 1990). Online economic data and articles are available
on the Dallas Fed's Internet web site, www.dallasfed.org.
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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.
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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