Some States Still Lagging After Great Recession but not Texas

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Harold D. Hunt and Luis B. Torres (Jul 1, 2016) Information taken from article published by the

Texas

A&M Real Estate Center

It should come as no surprise that the Texas economy has outperformed most states and the United States as a whole over the last decade. {{more:[read more]}}

Texas had matched its prerecession nonfarm employment peak by the end of 2011, a period of only three years. The U.S. took seven years, attaining parity in 2014.

Based on the Federal Housing Finance Agency?s (FHFA) home price index, housing prices in the U.S. ended 2015 barely above their prerecession peak. While Texas recorded a small dip in home prices during the recession, it was nothing like the double-digit drops in many states.

Why did Texas employment and home prices perform better than the U.S. overall during one of the worst economic downturns in decades?

The general thought is that a boom in oil and gas activity occurred at just the right time to carry Texas through the recession. That is indeed part of the story, but head-to-head data comparisons reveal that Texas has been at a comparative advantage for some time.

Migration Has Favored Texas …
 
Eight of the states that had not recovered experienced net outmigration over the entire 11-year analysis period. Connecticut, Michigan, New Jersey, and Rhode Island have seen net domestic outmigration every year since 2005. By contrast, Texas experienced fairly consistent positive domestic migration, indicating long-term economic attractiveness relative to other states.

Relocations occur from being ?pulled to? a new location, ?pushed from? an existing one, or both. Individuals may be pulled to other states by the prospect of better jobs, more affordable housing, or better climate. They may be pushed to leave a state by such things as job loss or a particularly burdensome tax structure.

All domestic migration, either positive or negative, was generally restrained during the height of the recession in 2010 and 2011. This would be expected as individuals often find it difficult to relocate during recessions. Possible reasons include perceived lack of better economic opportunities elsewhere, decline in home values below a homeowner?s mortgage payoff, or simply fear of change in uncertain times.

Peaks and Troughs Offer Insights …

 
The percentage of decline in both total nonfarm employment and home prices reveals how hard some states were hit during the last recession. While Texas only suffered 4 percent declines in both categories, Nevada was saddled with an almost 60 percent decline in home prices. Nevada?s total nonfarm employment dropped 14.9 percent, but employment in the construction sector dropped a devastating 67 percent peak to trough.

A consistent pattern emerged when comparing the magnitude of employment and housing price declines in the U.S. and every state except Texas, where it is about the same. The housing price troughs were always greater than the employment declines.

One possible explanation is that Texas avoided the residential home overbuilding that other states did not, which caused housing bubbles that collapsed and led into the recession.

The same pattern is observed in the recovery that occurred from the troughs to the end of the analysis period, except in Connecticut. Housing price rebounds were always greater than the rebounds in nonfarm employment.

The U.S. home price bubble is obvious in the early years, a trend not present in the Texas housing prices.

Over the analysis period, nonfarm employment peaks always occurred after housing prices had peaked. The range of lag times varied from one to six quarters. The same

Furthermore, nonfarm employment always reached a trough before housing prices, except in New Mexico where it occurred simultaneously. Lead times ranged from four to 12 quarters.

Employment reaching a bottom before home prices would be expected. Declining job growth would typically lead to an expectation of further job losses. This should continue to negatively affect home prices until a turnaround in employment changes market expectations to future job growth.

Prerecession housing prices peaking before employment was not expected. Logically, employment would peak and then begin a decline before home prices break over and follow employment down. After seasonally adjusting the data, employment did in fact decline before home prices, as would be expected.

Texas Not One-Trick Pony Anymore …

 
A number of factors have contributed to the state?s success, including a favorable tax and regulatory environment, affordable housing, and a good quality of life. These positive attributes have given businesses incentive to locate here, resulting in years of solid employment opportunities.

The home price and employment numbers show Texas has consistently outperformed most of the country, especially the 11 unrecovered states, for more than a decade.

Although the service-providing sector now dominates employment, the value of goods-producing jobs cannot be underestimated. Most of the goods-producing jobs are in ?basic? industries that bring in revenue from outside the state while also promoting increased local service-sector job growth.

They also typically pay higher salaries than the service sector. Wages paid per employee in goods-producing jobs averaged approximately 20 percent higher than service-producing wages from 1Q2005 to 3Q2015 at the national level (Figure 2). This difference is present in all the unrecovered states and in Texas, where wages per employee in goods-producing jobs are on average 47 percent higher, one of the highest registered differences.

Unlike most other states, Texas has offered a more even mix of manufacturing, construction, and mining and logging jobs. While the manufacturing subsector continues its gradual decline, construction and mining and logging jobs tend to fluctuate both up and down over the long-term.
 
As a result, Texas has been better positioned for future economic growth and less volatile home prices.
 
 

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