Top 1.0% of earners see wages up 157.8% since 1979

Newly available wage data for 2018 show that annual wages for the top 1.0% were nearly flat (up 0.2%) while wages for the bottom 90% rose an above-average 1.4%. Still, the top 1.0% has done far better in the 2009–18 recovery (their wages rose 19.2%) than did those in the bottom 90%, whose wages rose only 6.8%. Over the last four decades since 1979, the top 1.0% saw their wages grow by 157.8% and those in the top 0.1% had wages grow more than twice as fast, up 340.7%. In contrast those in the bottom 90% had annual wages grow by 23.9% from 1979 to 2018. This disparity in wage growth reflects a sharp long-term rise in the share of total wages earned by those in the top 1.0% and 0.1%.

These are the results of EPI’s updated series on wages by earning group, which is developed from published Social Security Administration data and updates the wage series from 1947–2004 originally published by Kopczuk, Saez and Song (2010). These data, unlike the usual source of our other wage analyses (the Current Population Survey) allow us to estimate wage trends for the top 1.0% and top 0.1% of earners, as well as those for the bottom 90% and other categories among the top 10% of earners. These data are not top-coded, meaning the underlying earnings reported are actual earnings and not “capped” or “top-coded” for confidentiality.

Figure A

Cumulative percent change in real annual wages, by wage group, 1979–2018

Year Bottom 90% 90th–95th 95th–99th Top 1%
1979 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
1980 -2.2% -1.3% -0.2% 3.4%
1981 -2.6% -1.1% -0.1% 3.1%
1982 -3.9% -0.9% 2.2% 9.5%
1983 -3.7% 0.7% 3.6% 13.6%
1984 -1.8% 2.5% 6.0% 20.7%
1985 -1.0% 4.0% 8.1% 23.0%
1986 1.1% 6.4% 12.5% 32.6%
1987 2.1% 7.4% 15.0% 53.5%
1988 2.2% 8.2% 18.4% 68.7%
1989 1.8% 8.1% 18.2% 63.3%
1990 1.1% 7.1% 16.5% 64.8%
1991 0.0% 6.9% 15.5% 53.6%
1992 1.5% 9.0% 19.2% 74.3%
1993 0.9% 9.2% 20.6% 67.9%
1994 2.0% 11.2% 21.0% 63.4%
1995 2.8% 12.2% 24.1% 70.2%
1996 4.1% 13.6% 27.0% 79.0%
1997 7.0% 16.9% 32.3% 100.6%
1998 11.0% 21.3% 38.2% 113.1%
1999 13.2% 25.0% 42.9% 129.7%
2000 15.3% 26.8% 48.0% 144.8%
2001 15.7% 29.0% 46.4% 130.4%
2002 15.6% 29.0% 43.2% 109.3%
2003 15.7% 30.3% 44.9% 113.9%
2004 15.6% 30.8% 47.1% 127.2%
2005 15.0% 30.8% 48.6% 135.3%
2006 15.7% 32.5% 52.1% 143.4%
2007 16.6625450273242% 34.0650819079098% 55.3586221137521% 156.174314731946%
2008 16.0% 34.2% 53.8% 137.5%
2009 16.0% 35.3% 53.5% 116.2%
2010 15.2% 35.7% 55.7% 130.8%
2011 14.5% 36.2% 56.9% 134.0%
2012 14.6% 36.3% 58.3% 148.3%
2013 15.1% 37.1% 59.4% 137.5%
2014 16.6% 38.7% 62.3% 149.0%
2015 20.5% 43.1% 67.9% 156.2%
2016 21.0% 43.5% 68.1% 148.1%
2017 22.2% 44.2% 69.3% 157.3%
2018 23.9% 45.7% 71.3% 157.8%
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Source: EPI analysis of Kopczuk, Saez, and Song (2010, Table A3) and Social Security Administration wage statistics

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As Figure A shows, the top 1.0% of earners are now paid 157.8% more than they were in 1979. Even more impressive is that those in the top 0.1% had more than double that wage growth, up 340.7% since 1979 (Table 1). In contrast, wages for the bottom 90% only grew 23.9% in that time. Since the Great Recession, the bottom 90%, in contrast, experienced very modest wage growth, with annual wages—reflecting growing annual hours as well as higher hourly wages—up just 6.8% from 2009 to 2018. In contrast, the wages of the top 0.1% grew 19.2% during those nine years.

Wages fell furthest among the top 0.1% and 1.0% of earners during the financial crisis from 2007 to 2009 and the top 0.1% in 2018 had not yet recovered their prior earnings in 2007.

It is worth noting that our series on the wage growth of the bottom 90% corresponds closely to the Social Security Administration’s series on median annual earnings: between 1990 and 2018 the real median annual wage grew 21.2%, very close to the 22.5% growth for the bottom 90%.

Table 1

Change in annual wages, by wage group, 1979–2018

Percent Change Percent Change
Average annual wages (2018 dollars)  Long-term Great Recession
Wage group 1979 2007 2009 2016 2017 2018 1979–2007 1979-2018 2007-09 2009-18 2016–18 2007-18
Bottom 90% $30,330 $35,384 $35,169 $36,711 $37,064 $37,574 16.7% 23.9% -0.6% 6.8% 2.3% 6.2%
Top 90th to 99th $99,204 $144,170 $143,795 $155,270 $156,192 $158,002 45.3% 59.3% -0.3% 9.9% 1.8% 9.6%
90%-95% $84,123 $112,780 $113,836 $120,689 $121,286 $122,595 34.1% 45.7% 0.9% 7.7% 1.6% 8.7%
95%-99% $118,054 $183,407 $181,245 $198,497 $199,826 $202,261 55.4% 71.3% -1.2% 11.6% 1.9% 10.3%
Upper 5% $151,672 $293,332 $268,702 $300,765 $307,118 $309,348 93.4% 104.0% -8.4% 15.1% 2.9% 5.5%
Upper 1% $286,145 $733,029 $618,529 $709,840 $736,287 $737,697 156.2% 157.8% -15.6% 19.3% 3.9% 0.6%
99.0%–99.9% $247,141 $487,056 $445,434 $498,252 $504,312 $507,652 97.1% 105.4% -8.5% 14.0% 1.9% 4.2%
99.9% -100% $637,180 $2,946,791 $2,176,388 $2,614,124 $2,824,069 $2,808,104 362.5% 340.7% -26.1% 29.0% 7.4% -4.7%
Average $39,091 $52,151 $50,779 $54,113 $54,778 $55,412 33.4% 41.8% -2.6% 9.1% 2.4% 6.3%

Source: EPI analysis of Kopczuk, Saez and Song (2010) and Social Security Administration wage statistics

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These disparities in wage growth reflect a major change in the distribution of wages since 1979. The bottom 90% earned 69.8% of all earnings in 1979 but only 61.0% in 2018. In contrast the top 1.0% increased its share of earnings from 7.3% in 1979 to 13.3% in 2018, a near-doubling. The growth of wages for the top 0.1% is the major dynamic driving the top 1.0% earnings as the top 0.1% more than tripled its earnings share from 1.6% in 1979 to 5.1% in 2018.

Table 2

Change in wage groups' shares of total wages, 1979–2018

Share of wages Long-term change Great Recession
Wage group 1979 2007 2009 2016 2017 2018 1979–2007 1979–2018 2007–2009 2009–2018 2016–2018 2007–2018
Bottom 90% 69.8% 61.1% 62.3% 61.1% 60.9% 61.0% -8.8 -8.8 1.3 -1.3 0.0 0.0
Top 90th to 99th 22.8% 24.9% 25.5% 25.8% 25.7% 25.7% 2.0 2.8 0.6 0.2 -0.2 0.8
90% – 95% 10.8 10.8 11.2 11.2 11.1 11.1 0.1 0.3 0.4 -0.1 -0.1 0.2
95% – 99% 12.1 14.1 14.3 14.7 14.6 14.6 2.0 2.5 0.2 0.3 -0.1 0.5
Upper 5% 19.4% 28.1% 26.5% 27.8% 28.0% 27.9% 8.7 8.5 -1.7 1.5 0.1 -0.2
Upper 1% 7.3% 14.1% 12.2% 13.1% 13.4% 13.3% 6.7 6.0 -1.9 1.1 0.2 -0.7
99.0%–99.9% 5.7 8.4 7.9 8.3 8.3 8.2 2.7 2.6 -0.5 0.4 0.0 -0.2
99.9% – 100% 1.6 5.7 4.3 4.8 5.2 5.1 4.0 3.4 -1.4 0.8 0.2 -0.6

Source: EPI analysis of Kopczuk, Saez and Song (2010) and Social Security Administration wage statistics

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