Subsector Snapshot | Printable (PDF)
This subsector includes pulp and paper mills and manufacturers of paper products, including office supplies and products for shipping and packaging.
Both U.S. and Texas employment in paper manufacturing have declined sharply in the last two decades. Since 1990, subsector employment is down by 32 percent in Texas and 43 percent in the nation as a whole. Texas’ subsector saw a slight increase in employment — 4 percent or 700 jobs — from 2015 through 2017 (Exhibit 1), while the national job count continued to decline.
As employment in the paper manufacturing subsector has declined, so too has its economic output. The Texas subsector’s inflation-adjusted GSP fell by 51 percent from 1997 to 2015; in the same period, the U.S. subsector’s gross product declined by 37 percent (Exhibit 2).
Year | U.S. | Texas |
---|---|---|
1990 | 0% | 0% |
1991 | -1% | 0% |
1992 | -1% | 1% |
1993 | -1% | 6% |
1994 | -1% | 12% |
1995 | -1% | 18% |
1996 | -2% | 16% |
1997 | -3% | 14% |
1998 | -3% | 13% |
1999 | -5% | 10% |
2000 | -7% | 9% |
2001 | -11% | 3% |
2002 | -16% | -3% |
2003 | -20% | -7% |
2004 | -23% | -14% |
2005 | -25% | -16% |
2006 | -27% | -20% |
2007 | -29% | -22% |
2008 | -31% | -25% |
2009 | -37% | -30% |
2010 | -39% | -32% |
2011 | -40% | -32% |
2012 | -41% | -33% |
2013 | -42% | -34% |
2014 | -42% | -35% |
2015 | -42% | -35% |
2016 | -43% | -33% |
2017 | -43% | -32% |
Sources: Texas Workforce Commission and Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Year | U.S. | Texas |
---|---|---|
1997 | 0% | 0% |
1998 | -8% | 15% |
1999 | -3% | 10% |
2000 | -9% | 2% |
2001 | -22% | -14% |
2002 | -20% | -17% |
2003 | -21% | -23% |
2004 | -16% | -17% |
2005 | -19% | -26% |
2006 | -14% | -31% |
2007 | -20% | -35% |
2008 | -30% | -43% |
2009 | -27% | -34% |
2010 | -33% | -40% |
2011 | -37% | -41% |
2012 | -37% | -50% |
2013 | -36% | -47% |
2014 | -35% | -49% |
2015 | -37% | -51% |
Sources: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis and Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
One method to measure a subsector’s regional strength is the location quotient (LQ), a ratio of the subsector’s share of employment in a region to its share of employment in the U.S. as a whole; the higher the LQ value, the more “concentrated” the industry. LQ values often are used to identify regional strengths and inform economic development and investment decisions.
A high LQ can identify a regional industry that enjoys a competitive advantage compared to other regions; an LQ below 1.00 can indicate competitive weakness. A regional LQ of at least 1.25 (meaning the subsector’s regional share of total employment is 25 percent greater than in the U.S.) can indicate an exporting subsector and the presence of a regional “industry cluster,” a group of interrelated firms providing related products or services and sharing similar needs for workers and suppliers.
Texas’ statewide 0.56 LQ in paper manufacturing indicates that the subsector and its industries are not highly competitive (Exhibit 3).
A regional assessment of employment concentration is useful, however, as the size of Texas’ economy and workforce can obscure regional industry strengths. The paper manufacturing subsector is highly concentrated in the Upper East, Central and Southeast Texas regions (Exhibit 4).
Industries | NAICS | 2016 Jobs | 2010 to 2016 % Change |
2016 Average Wages |
2016 Location Quotient |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Paper Manufacturing | 322 | 17,207 | -2.50% | $62,783 | 0.56 |
Pulp, Paper and Paperboard Mills | 3221 | 2,980 | -1.50% | $85,266 | 0.36 |
Converted Paper Product Manufacturing | 3222 | 14,228 | -2.70% | $58,075 | 0.63 |
Source: Emsi and Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Region | 2016 Location Quotient |
2016 Jobs |
---|---|---|
Upper East | 2.09 | 2,266 |
Central | 1.69 | 2,086 |
Southeast | 1.68 | 1,153 |
Upper Rio Grande | 0.92 | 785 |
Metroplex | 0.79 | 7,066 |
West | 0.77 | 532 |
Northwest | 0.5 | 272 |
South | 0.36 | 751 |
High Plains | 0.2 | 195 |
Gulf Coast | 0.19 | 1,431 |
Alamo | 0.18 | 520 |
Capital | 0.05 | 127 |
Texas | 0.56 | 17,207 |
Source: Emsi and Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Manufacturing continues to drive output and productivity in the Texas economy, creating jobs paying well above the statewide average. It also contributes significantly to job creation in other industries, particularly in design operations and services.
The paper manufacturing subsector’s employment and economic output levels have declined since the mid-1990s, both in the U.S. and Texas. Demand for paper products has declined as consumers shift to digital media. The subsector is buoyed, however, by demand for packaging from food and beverage industries.