Abstract

In 2011, the most severe drought in Texas history caused $7.62 billion in losses in the agricultural sector alone. This paper analyzes ripple effects of the 2011 drought in Texas agriculture on the entire state economy retrospectively in an effort to foster discussion on targeted mitigation measures in the long term. By using an Input-Output and social accounting matrix model, direct effects on livestock, cotton, sorghum, wheat, corn, hay, and timber production, as well as indirect effects on other related sectors, and finally induced effects from changing consumers behavior have been estimated. According to the results, the 2011 drought caused economic losses of $16.9 billion in the entire Texas economy and increased the unemployment by around 166,895 people. The agricultural sector alone lost around 106,000 jobs. The cotton farming experienced 91% of revenue losses (as compared to 2010), while the livestock production lost 32% in revenue. The decreased production yields and limited market supply directly influence market prices for those products, which might create additional spillover effects on export and import quantities. The presented analysis can be helpful for designing policies to launch mitigation programs for drought events in the future.

Highlights

  • Considerable economic losses of $7.62 billion have been recorded in Texas’ agricultural sector as a result of the 2011 drought [1,2,3]

  • The results show that the $7.62 billion of agricultural production losses caused irreversible ripple effects on the entire state economy in a direct or indirect way

  • The results indicate statewide impacts on a multitude of sectors in Texas agriculture that were significantly affected by the 2011 drought

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Summary

Introduction

Considerable economic losses of $7.62 billion have been recorded in Texas’ agricultural sector as a result of the 2011 drought [1,2,3]. The agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting sectors combined generated only 0.8% of the total real GDP among all industries in the Texas economy [4]. This number might be misleading as to the role of agriculture in the state economy and potential repercussions of drought that impacted agriculture directly in the first place and created ripple effects on other economic sectors. In 2005–2009, Texas agriculture contributed on average $6.1 billion in GDP to the state economy, ranking Texas number two among the US state in the total GDP from the agricultural sector alone. It ranks number three in the total value of agricultural products sold in the country, with cotton, hay, sheep, goats, mohair, and horses being the top agricultural

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