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Economy at a Glance - December 2023

This issue of Glance looks at Houston exports, employment, the business climate in Texas, and provides a peek into Partnership’s forecast for 2024 which will be released on December 7.
Published on 12/4/23

Better Than Expected, But...

’23 began with trepidation, but the year is nearly over. It started with a consensus among economists that the nation would slip into recession, nudged there by rising interest rates, stress in the housing market, and a pullback in consumer spending. While those have all occurred to some degree, the economy has proven to be resilient.
  • The nation added 2.4 million jobs through the first 10 months of ’23. That would be a healthy year for employment growth and November and December job data have yet to be reported.
  • U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) adjusted for inflation grew at 2.0 percent or better all year. The 5.2 percent growth logged in Q3 was the fifth-best rate of the past 20 years.
  • Personal consumption expenditures (PCE), the broadest measure of consumer spending, was up 2.2 percent in October compared to a year ago after adjusting for inflation.
  • The nation’s unemployment rate has wiggled all year but never went above 4.0 percent. Any rate under 5.0 percent reflects a tight labor market.

However, indicators for the month of October point to an American economy that has begun to slow. Employers added only 150,000 jobs in the month, well below the 200,000-pre-pandemic monthly average. Sales of new single-family homes slipped 5.6 percent in October. U.S. consumer spending grew only 0.2 percent that month as well. None of these are signs of imminent peril, but they do suggest a return to a slower, steadier state of activity.

If U.S. growth slows, so will Houston’s. Local job gains, home sales, port traffic, and manufacturing activity have slowed in recent months and this trend is likely to continue. Houston will see much slower growth in ’24. How much slower?

The Partnership will answer that question on Thursday, December 7, when it presents its Houston Economic Outlook for 2024 at the Royal Sonesta Hotel.

The program begins with registration and networking at 11 a.m. followed by lunch at noon. A discussion among experts attuned to the region’s growth begins at 12:30. This year’s discussants are:

  • Mark Cover, CEO, Southwest Region and Mexico/Central America, Hines
  • Hong Ogle, President, Bank of America Houston, Managing Director, SE/SW Division Executive, Private Bank
  • Amy Chronis, Vice Chair and Houston Managing Partner, Deloitte

The three will share their insights into real estate, construction, finance, energy, and professional services. Following the discussion, Patrick Jankowski, the Partner-ship’s Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of Re-search, will share the Partnership’s forecast for ’24. All attendees will receive a printed copy of the forecast after the event.

To register for the lunch, panel discussion, and forecast, go to the Events section of the Partnership’s webpage, www.houston.org, or click here. For more information, contact Rebekah Snodgrass at rsnodgrass@houston.org

Weaker Demand for "Made in Houston"

Metro Houston exports fell 13.8 percent in the first half of ’23, reflecting weaker commodity prices, slower global growth, and firms burning off excess inventories amassed post-pandemic. 

The data comes from the Census Bureau’s origin of movement (OM) series, which tracks the movement of goods based on the metro from which they began their export journey. For example, a valve manufactured in Houston may be trucked to Miami and then loaded onto a plane destined for an oilfield in Latin America. Though the export leaves the U.S. via the Miami International Airport, it began its export journey from Houston. Census records that as a Houston export. 

While shipments have fallen off, Houston remains the nation’s top exporting metro, ahead of New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago. The region has ranked as the nation’s top exporting metro nine out of the past 10 years. When complete data for ’23 is released, Houston will likely maintain that ranking.

Employment Update

Metro Houston added 16,400 jobs in October. That’s slightly above the normal range (12,000 to 14,000) for the month. Year-to-date, the region has created 53,700 jobs. 

The region typically adds 15,000 to 30,000 jobs in November and December, which would have Houston finish the year with 63,000 to 83,000 jobs.  Last December, the Partnership forecast the region would create just under 80,000 jobs if the U.S. avoided a recession. The region is on track to hit the Partnership’s forecast.

Six sectors led job growth in October—health care and social assistance, local public education, professional, scientific, and technical services, retail trade, state public education, and transportation and warehousing. As a group, they added over 19,000 jobs.

Gains were offset by losses in administrative and support services, construction, non-durable goods manufacturing, restaurants and bars, services to buildings and dwellings, and the obscure “management of enterprises” sector.

Total payroll employment in Houston now tops 3,389,500. Since the economy reopened in May ’20, the region has added 557,000 jobs, recovering 155.0 percent of the 359,300 jobs lost early in the pandemic. Employment will likely top 3.4 million by year’s end, only to lose 40,000 to 50,000 jobs in January if the region follows the typical seasonal pattern. By late ’24, employment should surpass 3.4 million again.

To continue reading, download this report.

Note: The geographic area referred to in this publication as “Houston,” "Houston Area” and “Metro Houston” is the nine-county Census designated metropolitan statistical area of Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX. The nine counties are: Austin, Brazoria, Chambers, Fort Bend, Galveston, Harris, Liberty, Montgomery and Waller.

Key December Takeaways

Here are the facts to know about the Houston region this month
1
December Takeaway #1
The region is on track to hit the Partnership’s employment forecast for ’23.
2
December Takeaway #2
Metro Houston exports fell 13.8 percent in the first half of the year.
3
December Takeaway #3
Though costs have increased, Houston remains one of the most affordable places to live in America.

Want to learn more? Contact our Research Team:

Patrick Jankowski, CERP
Senior Vice President, Research
713-844-3616

Previous Issues of Economy at a Glance

NOV
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Houston’s population compared to other major U.S. metros
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OCT
2023
Shifts in Houston’s Demography
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SEPT
2023
The Houston Ship Channel, the outlook for business in Texas, and local employment trends
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AUG
2023
The Pivot from Recession to Resilience
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JUL
2023
Mid-Year Report
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JUN
2023
The Global Economy, Home Sales, and Construction
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MAY
2023
U.S. Economic Outlook and Houston's Energy Industry
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APR
2023
Houston's population growth and employment revisions
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MAR
2023
U.S. Recession and Houston's Key Indicators
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FEB
2023
The Year in Review
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JAN
2023
The U.S. Economy and Houston's GDP Estimates
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DEC
2022
Recovery in the Oil and Gas Industry
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NOV
2022
Metro Houston's Job Growth and the Apartment Market
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OCT
2022
Exploring Population Changes Through the ACS
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SEPT
2022
Recession? Maybe, Maybe Not
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AUG
2022
Houston at Mid-Year
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JUL
2022
The Houston Housing Market, Affordability, and Recent Shifts
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JUN
2022
Economic Recovery, Population Growth & Global Houston recap
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MAY
2022
Economic recovery, rising costs & labor force
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APR
2022
Population growth and employment data
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MAR
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Local Impact of a Global Event
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FEB
2022
Post-Analysis of 2021 Houston Economy
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JAN
2022
Omicron, GDP, Employment
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DEC
2021
2022 Employment Forecast
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NOV
2021
Job Gains, Real Estate, Exports
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OCT
2021
Inflation, Employment & Global Innovation
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SEP
2021
Employment, Oil & Gas, Containerized Exports, and Housing
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AUG
2021
Delta Variant, Rebounding Travel, Economic Growth and Population Gains
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JUL
2021
Energy Transition, Recovery Bottlenecks, & the Worker Shortage
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JUN
2021
Economic Recovery, Multifamily, Population & More
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May
2021
Housing Boom and Robust Recovery
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APR
2021
Pandemic Recovery, Tech Workforce
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MAR
2021
Pandemic Employment Data
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FEB
2021
Coronavirus Impact and 2021 Outlook
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JAN
2021
Racial Demographics and Population Shifts
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NOV
2020
U.S. Recovery, 2021 Outlook
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OCT
2020
U.S. Recovery, Houston Update
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SEP
2020
COVID-19 Impact on Economy
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AUG
2020
Energy Change Over Time
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JUL
2020
COVID-19 Update, Houston Unemployment
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JUN
2020
COVID-19 Update, Affected Sectors, Energy
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MAY
2020
U.S. & Texas Outlook, GDP
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APR
2020
COVID-19 Update, PMI, Industry Outlook
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MAR
2020
Economic Impact, Global Outlook, Recession Probability
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FEB
2020
U.S.-China Trade Deal, USMCA
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JAN
2020
Houston GDP, Energy, Jobs
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DEC
2019
Sector by Sector Forecast for 2020
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NOV
2019
Houston Region Demographic Update 2
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OCT
2019
Houston Region Demographic Update 1
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SEP
2019
Houston's Growth Engines
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AUG
2019
PMI, Commercial Real Estate & Housing
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