There’s no hiding from the new economy…part 2
Jared Bernstein
April 21, 2003
Snapshot for March 12, 2003.
There's no hiding from the new
economy…part 2
The
January 22 Economic Snapshot focused on the dramatic increase
in the unemployment rates of computer scientists, revealing the
widespread pain of the jobless recovery. The figure below shows the
wage side of the story.
The data in the figure are yearly changes in the nominal (not
inflation-adjusted) wages of professional and technical workers, a
white-collar category that includes some of the most highly skilled
workers in the economy, including those in high-tech industries.
The effect of the recent recession can be seen at the end of the
figure, as wage growth has fallen sharply since the first quarter
of 2001. In fact, the 1.7% rate of wage growth over the past
year—between 2001:4
and 2002:4—was the slowest in the history of the series, well below
the
rate of inflation over that period (2.2%). Thus, pervasive weakness
in the labor market has led to falling real wages, even for some of
the most highly educated workers.
This week's Snapshot by EPI economist Jared Bernstein.
Check out the archive for past Economic Snapshots.
 
More Snapshots
- Jobs ... but low pay
- Another challenge for the unemployed: Public library budget cuts
- State and local job losses threaten recovery
- Without federal intervention, unemployment would be near 16%
- Another consequence of the recession: Rising federal budget deficits
- Corporate profits have recovered, but job market still depressed
- Running out of steam
- Free Trade Agreement with Korea will cost U.S. jobs
- Another day, one less dollar
- Older men face longer job searches
- Recession takes a slice out of retirement savings
- Unemployment spells in Michigan and South Carolina are the longest in the nation
- Many jobless can not collect unemployment benefits
- Trading test anxiety for job market jitters
- Women now hold close to half of all jobs
- Americans work longer
- Small group takes large slice of capital income
- At the top: Soaring incomes, falling tax rates
- Counting the jobs lost to China
- Health insurance for more Americans
- Archive


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