N/A of the households in Texas City, TX reported speaking a non-English language at home as their primary shared language. This does not consider the potential multi-lingual nature of households, but only the primary self-reported language spoken by all members of the household.
The economy of Texas City, TX employs N/A people. The largest industries in Texas City, TX are Health Care & Social Assistance (3,748 people), Retail Trade (2,694 people), and Educational Services (2,467 people), and the highest paying industries are Manufacturing ($85,500), Utilities ($70,625), and Educational Services ($62,254).
The most common job groups, by number of people living in Texas City, TX, are Office & Administrative Support Occupations (2,764 people), Food Preparation & Serving Related Occupations (2,115 people), and Sales & Related Occupations (2,016 people). This chart illustrates the share breakdown of the primary jobs held by residents of Texas City, TX.
The most common employment sectors for those who live in Texas City, TX, are Health Care & Social Assistance (3,748 people), Retail Trade (2,694 people), and Educational Services (2,467 people). This chart shows the share breakdown of the primary industries for residents of Texas City, TX, though some of these residents may live in Texas City, TX and work somewhere else. Census data is tagged to a residential address, not a work address.
In 2022, universities in Texas City, TX awarded 760 degrees. The student population of Texas City, TX in N/A is skewed towards N/A, with N/A male students and N/A female students.
Most students graduating from Universities in Texas City, TX are White (297 and 39.1%), followed by Hispanic or Latino (290 and 38.2%), Black or African American (115 and 15.1%), and Asian (22 and 2.89%).
In N/A, N/A men were awarded degrees from institutions in Texas City, TX, which is N/A times N/A than the N/A female students who received degrees in the same year.
In 2022 the most common race/ethnicity group awarded degrees at institutions was White students. These 297 degrees mean that there were 1.02 times more degrees awarded to White students then the next closest race/ethnicity group, Hispanic or Latino, with 290 degrees awarded.
The graph shows the evolution of awarded degrees by degrees. Under the paragraphs, the average number of awarded degrees by university in each degree is shown.
Data is only available at the state level. Showing data for N/A.
Race
The most common educational levels obtained by the working population in N/A were N/A.
This visualization illustrates the percentage distribution of the population according to the highest educational level reached. You can filter the data by race by using the selector above.
Please note that the buckets used in this visualization were not evenly distributed by ACS when publishing the data.
N/A
Median Household Income
± N/A
N/A
Number of Households
± N/A
The following chart displays the households in Texas City, TX distributed between a series of income buckets compared to the national averages for each bucket. The largest share of households have an income in the N/A range.
The closest comparable wage GINI for Texas City, TX is from Texas.
0.476
2022 Wage GINI in Texas
0.476
2021 Wage GINI in Texas
In 2022, the income inequality in Texas was 0.476 according to the GINI calculation of the wage distribution. Income inequality had a 0.0231% decline from 2021 to 2022, which means that wage distribution grew somewhat more even. The GINI for Texas was lower than than the national average of 0.478. In other words, wages are distributed more evenly in Texas in comparison to the national average.
This chart shows the number of workers in Texas across various wage buckets compared to the national average.
In N/A, N/A% of workers in Texas City, TX N/A, followed by those who N/A (N/A%) and those who N/A (N/A%).
The following chart shows the number of households using each mode of transportation over time, using a logarithmic scale on the y-axis to help better show variations in the smaller means of commuting.
Using averages, employees in Texas City, TX have a N/A commute time (N/A minutes) than the normal US worker (N/A minutes). Additionally, 2.57% of the workforce in Texas City, TX have "super commutes" in excess of 90 minutes.
The chart below shows how the median household income in Texas City, TX compares to that of it's neighboring and parent geographies.
The following chart displays the households in Texas City, TX distributed between a series of car ownership buckets compared to the national averages for each bucket. The largest share of households in Texas City, TX have N/A.
N/A% of the population for whom poverty status is determined in Texas City, TX (N/A out of N/A people) live below the poverty line, a number that is approximately the same as the national average of N/A%. The largest demographic living in poverty are N/A N/A, followed by N/A N/A and then N/A N/A.
The most common racial or ethnic group living below the poverty line in Texas City, TX is Black, followed by White and Hispanic.
The Census Bureau uses a set of money income thresholds that vary by family size and composition to determine who classifies as impoverished. If a family's total income is less than the family's threshold than that family and every individual in it is considered to be living in poverty.
In 2017, California had the highest estimated number of chronically homeless individuals in the nation, at 35,798. New York has the second highest (5,087), followed by Florida (4,915).
The following map shows the estimated number of chronically homeless individuals by state over multiple years.
N/A% of the population of Texas City, TX has health coverage, with N/A% on employee plans, N/A% on Medicaid, N/A% on Medicare, N/A% on non-group plans, and N/A% on military or VA plans.
The following chart shows how the percent of uninsured individuals in Texas City, TX changed over time compared with the percent of individuals enrolled in various types of health insurance.