Torres: Valley economy will not rebound until COVID-19 is defeated

Published: Aug. 11, 2020, 1 a.m.

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WESLACO, Texas \\u2013 Economist Luis Torres of the Texas A&M Real Estate Center says the path to recovery for the Rio Grande Valley economy depends on COVID-19 outcomes.

By way of an example, Torres said the number of unemployment claims in the region grew around July 4, just as the number of coronavirus cases increased. He called this \\u201cworrisome.\\u201d

Torres made his remarks as keynote speaker during a recent webinar hosted by the Rio Grande Valley Partnership. It was titled Economic Indicators in Housing and Commercial Markets\\u2013Texas & RGV.

\\u201cThe good news is the economy is on a recovery path, after the lockdown. But, the only thing here is, the recovery is going to depend on the COVID-19 pandemic. That is the issue going forward,\\u201d Torres said.

Torres pointed out that the current economic crisis started because of a health crisis.\\xa0

\\u201cIt was not started by economic forces. So, we closed the economy voluntarily. It was a self-induced coma of the economy. Now the issue here is the severity, because it will depend on health outcomes and the uncertainty going forward, the duration and the impact.\\u201d

Torres said the uncertainty is affecting everyone.\\xa0

\\u201cHouseholds, businesses, all of our planning for the future depends on how well we control the COVID-19 pandemic. It affects investments, consumption decisions and, of course, that affects economic activity.\\u201d

Torres said the Texas A&M Real Estate Center has developed a weekly index for the Texas economy. \\u201cWe need to know right now, in a timely fashion what is happening with the economy. There has been an uptick. However, we are currently in a recession.\\u201d

Torres said the Brownsville Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) lost about 60,000 jobs once the pandemic hit, while McAllen MSA lost around 28,000 jobs. He said things have recovered since then. \\u201cThings are still negative but the good news were are on a recovery path.\\u201d

The Valley economy was doing well before the pandemic, Torres pointed out, with unemployment in Brownsville at 5.7 percent and in McAllen at 6.5 percent. The stay-at-home orders and closure of certain business sectors led to a 19 percent unemployment rate in McAllen and a rate of almost 18 percent in Brownsville. Brownsville is now reporting 10.4 percent, Torres said, and McAllen 12 percent.

The sector hit hardest, Torres said, was leisure and hospitality.\\xa0

Editor\\u2019s Note: Click here to read the full story and view a slideshow of Luis Torres\\u2019 powerpoint presentation.\\xa0

To read the new stories and watch the news videos of the Rio Grande Guardian International News Service go to www.riograndeguardian.com.

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