Subsector Snapshot | Printable (PDF)
Texas’ nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing employment rose by 30 percent in the 1990s, peaking at 45,100 jobs in 2001. The job count declined substantially following the Great Recession in 2008 but has recovered slightly in recent years. The Texas job count remains nearly 9 percent above 1990 levels. U.S. employment in this subsector, by contrast, is 23 percent below the 1990 level (Exhibit 1).
Texas’ inflation-adjusted GDP in the nonmetallic mineral product subsector rose by 19 percent from 1997 to 2015. During this period, the U.S. subsector GDP declined by 17 percent (Exhibit 2).
Year | Real GDP | Employment |
---|---|---|
1990 | 0.0% | 0.0% |
1991 | -6.4% | -4.3% |
1992 | -7.8% | -2.6% |
1993 | -7.1% | 1.7% |
1994 | -4.4% | 7.2% |
1995 | -2.9% | 11.2% |
1996 | -2.1% | 14.1% |
1997 | -0.5% | 15.9% |
1998 | 1.3% | 19.3% |
1999 | 2.3% | 25.9% |
2000 | 4.9% | 29.1% |
2001 | 3.0% | 30.0% |
2002 | -2.3% | 27.4% |
2003 | -6.5% | 23.6% |
2004 | -4.3% | 24.5% |
2005 | -4.4% | 25.6% |
2006 | -3.6% | 28.0% |
2007 | -5.3% | 28.2% |
2008 | -12.0% | 21.3% |
2009 | -25.4% | 3.2% |
2010 | -29.8% | -5.2% |
2011 | -30.6% | -7.2% |
2012 | -30.9% | -6.9% |
2013 | -29.3% | -2.6% |
2014 | -27.3% | 2.0% |
2015 | -24.7% | 6.3% |
2016 | -22.9% | 8.6% |
Sources: Texas Workforce Commission and Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Year | U.S. | Texas |
---|---|---|
1997 | 0.0% | 0.0% |
1998 | -0.4% | 6.3% |
1999 | 0.8% | 19.1% |
2000 | -0.2% | 17.2% |
2001 | -2.3% | 15.1% |
2002 | -3.6% | 24.9% |
2003 | -0.9% | 12.8% |
2004 | 6.0% | 25.0% |
2005 | 7.2% | 37.4% |
2006 | -0.1% | 24.0% |
2007 | -0.3% | 22.6% |
2008 | -8.8% | 24.1% |
2009 | -27.4% | -8.5% |
2010 | -27.3% | -14.4% |
2011 | -25.0% | -14.1% |
2012 | -22.8% | -6.7% |
2013 | -17.5% | 9.5% |
2014 | -15.6% | 22.6% |
2015 | -17.0% | 18.5% |
Sources: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis and Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing consists of five industries, including the manufacturing of construction components such as stone and concrete and the creation of glass, ceramic and tile products (Exhibit 3).
Two of the industries — clay product and refractory manufacturing and other nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing — are considered “advanced industries” as defined by the Brookings Institution. Such industries have two distinguishing criteria: R&D spending per worker ranks in the top 20 percent of industries, and their share of workers with high levels of scientific and technical knowledge exceeds the national average. In 2015, advanced industries accounted for just 8.7 percent of total U.S. jobs yet generated 60 percent of exports, 81 percent of patents and 89 percent of private-sector R&D. Their emphasis on innovation and highly skilled workers makes the advanced industries essential to prosperity and rising standards of living.
Description | NAICS Code | 2016 Jobs | 2001 to 2010 % Change |
2010 to 2016 % Change |
2016 Average Salaries | 2001 Location Quotient | 2016 Location Quotient |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clay Products and Refractory* | 3271 | 5,102 | -28.2% | 4.3% | $55,709 | 1.22 | 1.56 |
Glass and Glass Products | 3272 | 3,579 | -49.5% | 17.4% | $57,556 | 0.62 | 0.51 |
Cement and Concrete Products | 3273 | 21,426 | -24.3% | 18.5% | $60,245 | 1.41 | 1.37 |
Lime and Gypsum Products | 3274 | 1,302 | -24.2% | -0.9% | $60,835 | 1.22 | 1.09 |
Other Nonmetallic Mineral Products* | 3279 | 6,176 | -9.0% | 10.2% | $51,497 | 1.14 | 0.98 |
Total Nonmetallic Mineral Product Manufacturing | 327 | 37,586 | -26.2% | 14.1% | $57,956 | 1.14 | 1.12 |
* Indicates advanced industry as defined by Brookings Institution.
Sources: Emsi and Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
One way to assess industries is with location quotient (LQ), a measure of employment concentration in a given area; the higher the LQ value, the more “concentrated” the industry.
Texas’ nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing subsector LQ was 1.12 in 2016, meaning that its share of the industry’s employment was 12 percent greater in Texas than in the U.S. (Exhibit 3).
Within the subsector, industries with the greatest concentration levels in Texas were clay product and refractory manufacturing (1.56 LQ) and cement and concrete product manufacturing (1.37 LQ).