Arts Mean Business
Texas arts pump record-breaking billions into Lone Star State
The arts mean big bucks for the Lone Star State. Texas Cultural Arts recently released the 2017 State of the Arts report, which shows that the arts and culture industry, encompassing everything from music and entertainment to architecture and engineering, pumped a record-breaking $5.5 billion into the Texas economy last year, which translates to $343.7 million in annual sales tax revenue.
"We know the arts are important to our culture and our society, and this report affirms they are increasingly important to our economy as well," says Judy Robison, chair of the Texas Cultural Trust, in a release.
The financial impact of the arts has increased 25.1 percent in the past 10 years. Additionally, the creative sector employs 1-in-15 Texans, and that number is expected to increase by 20 percent in 2024. Nearly 12 percent of the Austin workforce is involved in the arts industry. Those workers make $45,672 for non-creative positions and $78,304 for creative positions on average.
Jennifer Ransom Rice, executive director of the Texas Cultural Trust, sums it up: "The arts mean business in Texas." Here's the breakdown of what the arts sector generated in Texas' largest metros in 2016:
Austin-Round Rock: $502,195,150
Dallas-Plano-Irving: $1,267,565,172
Fort Worth-Arlington: $332,935,945
Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown: $1,025,314,133
San Antonio: $330,844,451