Manufacturing Employment Trends
Texas Metro Areas
August 2020 Update

Manufacturing job growth in Texas metropolitan areas stalled in July with modest gains in cities across the state offset by losses in Houston.
Using Localintel's free and publicly accessible Industry Job Tracker, this report provides 7 observations highlighting changes in manufacturing employment levels for the state's metro areas. At the time of writing, the Tracker draws on the data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics as released on August 21, 2020.
Observation 1
These 5 Texas metro areas recorded the steepest increase in manufacturing jobs last month (measured by percentage change in manufacturing jobs from June 2020):
Name | % increase | change in jobs |
---|---|---|
Waco | 5.9% | 900 |
San Angelo | 3.4% | 100 |
Abilene | 3.3% | 100 |
El Paso | 2.5% | 400 |
Odessa | 2.1% | 100 |
Observation 2
These 5 Texas metro areas experienced the largest gains in manufacturing jobs in July 2020 (measured by the change in the number of manufacturing jobs from June 2020):
Name | change in jobs | % increase |
---|---|---|
Waco | 900 | 5.9% |
Austin-Round Rock | 700 | 1.1% |
El Paso | 400 | 2.5% |
Fort Worth-Arlington | 300 | 0.3% |
Amarillo | 200 | 1.5% |
Observation 3
The following 5 Texas metro areas recorded manufacturing job losses in July 2020 (measured by percentage change in jobs from June 2020):
Name | % increase | change in jobs |
---|---|---|
Killeen-Temple | -2.6% | -200 |
Tyler | -2.0% | -100 |
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land | -1.6% | -3,600 |
Beaumont-Port Arthur | -0.5% | -100 |
Dallas-Plano-Irving | -0.1% | -100 |
Observation 4
The state's 5 largest manufacturing cities lost a combined total of -2,500 manufacturing jobs last month. Gains in Austin, Fort Worth and San Antonio were offset by larger losses in the Houston metro area.
Name | change in jobs | % change |
---|---|---|
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land | -3,600 | -1.6% |
Dallas-Plano-Irving | -100 | -0.1% |
Fort Worth-Arlington | 300 | 0.3% |
Austin-Round Rock | 700 | 1.1% |
San Antonio-New Braunfels | 200 | 0.4% |
Observation 5
The 5 Texas metro areas with the highest concentration of manufacturing jobs (measured by location quotient) added a combined total of 1,300 manufacturing jobs in July.
Name | LQ | change in jobs |
---|---|---|
Beaumont-Port Arthur | 1.6 | -100 |
Waco | 1.5 | 900 |
Amarillo | 1.3 | 200 |
Sherman-Denison | 1.3 | 0 |
Fort Worth-Arlington | 1.0 | 300 |
Observation 6
In July 2020, there were 41,500 fewer manufacturing jobs in Texas metros than in July 2019.
Observation 7
Here’s how Texas’s recovery compares with the country’s other leading manufacturing states (measured by percentage change in manufacturing jobs from June 2020):
Name | % increase | change in jobs |
---|---|---|
Michigan | 1.1% | 4,900 |
California | 0.7% | 8,700 |
Wisconsin | 0.7% | 2,100 |
Texas | -0.1% | -800 |
Illinois | -0.5% | -2,300 |
Indiana | -0.7% | -2,300 |
Ohio | -1.5% | -7,500 |
Want to know more?
Localintel’s interactive Industry Job Tracker can be accessed at www.ecdev.org/Insight/job-tracker. We created the Tracker to help economic developers and policy makers keep an eye on employment change in the nation’s metropolitan areas. The online tool draws on the latest data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and is updated monthly by Localintel.
Data source
Localintel’s Industry Job Tracker presents data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Current Employment Statistics survey (establishment survey). The establishment survey provides information on employment, hours, and earnings of employees on nonfarm payrolls. BLS collects this data each month from a sample of over 390,000 establishments employing over 47 million nonfarm wage and salary workers, full or part time, who receive pay during the payroll period which includes the 12th of the month. According to the BLS, statistics based on the establishment survey are subject to both sampling and non-sampling error. BLS analyses are generally conducted at the 90-percent level of confidence. The BLS does not seasonally adjust the industry specific employment data for metro areas. Localintel updates the Industry Job Tracker each month with the latest BLS establishment survey data for metro areas. The Tracker identifies the period to which the data applies and when the last update occurred. More information about the Current Employment Statistics program can be found at https://www.bls.gov/ces/. Definitions for Metropolitan Areas and how the BLS measures geographic areas can be accessed at https://www.bls.gov/opub/hom/topic/geographic-area-definitions.htm.
About Localintel
Localintel makes online economic development tools that hundreds of organizations have added to their website to promote their community’s advantages, assist local businesses and monitor trends. Localintel’s customers range from the small city of Brazoria (population 3,112 people) through to Texas Economic Development Corporation, Washington DC Economic Partnership, Indy Chamber, New Orleans Business Alliance and the cities of Southfield, Royal Oak, Troy and East Lansing.