Inflation-adjusted wages fall again in June: Down six of the last seven months
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Snapshot for July 16, 2004
Inflation-adjusted wages fall again in
June
Down six of the last seven months
With today’s release of inflation data for June, EPI analysis
reveals that real hourly and weekly earnings have fallen for six
out of the last seven months (see the figures below).
The average hourly wage of blue-collar (production) workers in manufacturing and non-managers in services was $15.65 last month (these workers represent about 80% of the private-sector workforce). When the recovery began in November 2001, their real wage was $15.69, slightly higher than the real value in June 2004 (see Figure 1). For weekly earnings, the relevant values are $530.17 in November 2001 and $525.84 last month, as shown in Figure 2 (the larger decline for weekly earnings is due to a loss in hours worked per week). In other words, after adjusting for inflation, both hourly and weekly earnings are below where they were when the current recovery got underway.


There are three factors contributing to the decline of real wages
in the current labor market. The first and most important
factor is the lingering effect of the formerly jobless
recovery. Though employment is growing again, considerable
slack remains in the labor market. The unemployment rate, for
example, at 5.6% in June 2004, is at the very same rate as in
November 2001 when the current recovery began. Under these
labor market conditions, with an oversupply of workers relative to
employers’ demands, there is little pressure to bid wages up.
Second, the quality of the net new jobs appears to be putting
downward pressure on wage growth. Specifically, industries
and occupations that are adding jobs most quickly pay less than
those growing more slowly. There is considerable confusion on
this point. For example, analysis published by factcheck.org
reported that more job growth has occurred in sectors paying above
the median wage than below that wage level.
1 But this is not what drives wage growth.
Instead, the average wage is driven up when high-wage sectors grow
faster than average and vice versa. Over the past year,
industries and occupations growing faster than average pay 7% less
than those that are growing more slowly.
Finally, faster inflation in recent months has meant that nominal
wages need to grow faster to beat price growth. Yet, because
of the factors noted above, nominal wage growth has slowed sharply,
from an annual average of 2.9% in the second quarter of last year
to 2.1% in the same quarter this year. Inflation over this
same period has accelerated from 2.2% to 2.8%. Thus, even if
inflation were back to its level of a year ago, wages would still
be stagnant at best, with real wage growth far behind the growth
rate of productivity.
Although employment has thankfully begun to rebound, the persistent
effects of the longest jobless recovery on record continue to take
a toll on wage growth, meaning working families have to work more
hours to lift their real incomes.
1 The factcheck.org release also notes that real average weekly earnings are up 1.08% from January 2001 to June 2004. In fact, that increase is for January 2001 to May 2004. Since weekly earnings fell sharply in June 2004, including this month makes a significant difference. The actual increase in real average weekly earnings from January 2001 through June 2004 is 0.3%, not 1.08%.
Today's Snapshot was written by EPI senior economist
Jared Bernstein and EPI economist
Elise Gould.
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