Eight times a year, the Federal Reserve releases what it calls the , a collection of data about the current state of the economy. Unlike most economic reports, it鈥檚 not filled with numbers and statistics or dense economic jargon.
Instead, economists with regional Federal Reserve banks conduct interviews, send out questionnaires and talk with community organizations about what they鈥檙e actually seeing on the ground.
Texas Standard producer and reporter Sean Saldana joined the show to talk about what the most recent Dallas Federal Reserve entry says about the state鈥檚 economy. Listen to the interview above or read the transcript below.
This transcript has been edited lightly for clarity:
Texas Standard: So this gives us a brief overview of the Texas economy at the moment. Where do you want to start? Prices, perhaps?
Sean Saldana: Yes, the abstract concept of price.
So obviously, as consumers, we are facing high inflation: 3% right now. But according to a survey from the Dallas Federal Reserve, this also applies to businesses.
A number of business executives around the state expect their input costs 鈥 this is the money it costs to run a business 鈥 to go up by around 5% on the year. Now, often businesses will pass these price increases on to U.S. customers because, you know, we still have to buy gas and groceries 鈥 but they鈥檙e finding it harder and harder to do that because right now, a lot of Texans are very price sensitive, cutting back on certain items. So a lot of businesses are in this sort of tough spot at the moment because their prices are going up, but they鈥檙e having a hard time passing those along to us penny-pinching customers.
And so by the end of the year, many Texas businesses are expecting to raise their prices by around 3%, which means we might not even get the full cost of inflation passed on to us customers.
禄 RELATED:
So we鈥檝e talked a bit about businesses, a bit about their customers鈥 What about workers? How are they doing at the moment?
They鈥檙e doing okay.
The top line finding here is that Texas businesses are still largely looking to hire employees. A big thing to remember here is that we are still coming off what many called 鈥渢he Great Resignation,鈥 which was roughly the period from 2021 to 2022 where workers across the country were quitting their old jobs for new ones with higher pay in better working conditions. That big movement creating a lot of vacancies.
Then there鈥檚 also the fact that Texas is a massive state that is seemingly always adding jobs. So here I鈥檓 going to list off some of the industries the Dallas Fed says are hiring and you tell me if there are any big surprise: Health care, trucking, oilfield services and auto repair. That sound right to you?
Well, to be honest, no real surprises to me. I mean, those are some of the businesses 鈥 jobs 鈥 that I think would be on my list, that鈥檚 for sure.
Yeah. So anyone out there interested in a career change, there are opportunities, according to the Dallas Federal Reserve. And so last week they put out an for the state. And according to their estimates, Texas is expected to employ a little over 14 million people by the end of the year. So they鈥檙e hiring.
Food and fiber system, part of the economy related to agriculture, makes up around 9% of the Texas economy, which is huge. How鈥檚 that part of Texas looking?
As you mentioned, food and agriculture, it鈥檚 a $160 billion part of the state鈥檚 economy every year. And the main finding around agriculture in the Beige Book is that it has been hit very hard by the historic heat we鈥檝e experienced this summer.
So according to the Dallas Fed, a big portion of the region has 鈥渆ntered or reentered鈥 a drought since the last time they collected data back in August. This is something I talked about with economist and frequent Texas Standard guest Ray Perryman.
Ray Perryman: 鈥淭he biggest impact has been on agriculture, because obviously when you have heat, when you have drought, that affects crops, it affects livestock, it affects the viability of the industry because of the impact it can have on land values.鈥
Back in July, Perryman鈥檚 company, The Perryman Group, put out some suggesting that this heat we鈥檝e experienced could bring agriculture production down by about five and a half percent on the year. A lot of this due to the fact the sun and the temperatures are just scorching a lot of crops in the field.
If you鈥檝e ever had a backyard garden or houseplants that have been destroyed by the sunlight and heat during the summer, that is basically the same thing that鈥檚 happening with Texas agriculture right now.
禄 RELATED:
Ray Perryman: 鈥淟iterally, the heat we saw this summer, which was really just killing plants in the field in a way that we haven鈥檛 haven鈥檛 seen before this. The measures we did were all above the normal Texas number, you know, because the Texas numbers are always pretty brutal. But this one has been kind of off the charts.鈥
The heat has especially hit row crops hard, which is basically any crop that grows in a row 鈥 potatoes, vegetables, tomatoes, things that you might have in a backyard garden. And one crop that鈥檚 especially been hit hard, according to the Dallas Fed, is cotton, which is in 鈥渧ery poor condition.鈥 And it鈥檚 gotten so bad that a lot of farmers are expected to abandon their crop, which is where you don鈥檛 even bother to pull it out of the ground.
If you found the reporting above valuable, please consider making a donation to support it . Your gift helps pay for everything you find on and . Thanks for donating today.
Copyright 2023 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit .