Wages for the top 1% skyrocketed 160% since 1979 while the share of wages for the bottom 90% shrunk: Time to remake wage pattern with economic policies that generate robust wage-growth for vast majority

Newly available wage data tell a familiar story: In every period since 1979, wages for the bottom 90% were continuously redistributed upward to the top 10% and frequently to the very highest 1.0% and 0.1%. This unceasing growth of wage inequality that undercuts wage growth for the bottom 90% reaffirms the need to place generating robust wage growth for the vast majority and worker power at the center of economic policymaking.

For last year, 2019, the data show a continuation of the trend of annual wages rising fastest for those in the top 10% while those in the bottom 90% saw below-average wage growth. However, within the top 10%, wages rose faster for those in the 90th–99th percentiles than for those in the top 1%.

A similar pattern as in 2019 prevailed over the entire 2007–2019 business cycle as wages were redistributed in two ways, up from the bottom 90% to the top 10% and within the top 10% downward from the top 1% to those in the 90th–99th percentiles. Still, the top 1% has done far better in the 2009–2019 recovery (wages rose 20.4%) than did those in the bottom 90% (wages rose only 8.7%).

As Figure A shows, the top 1% and the very tippy top, those in the top 0.1%, were the clear winners over the longer-term 1979–2019 period:

  • The top 1.0% saw their wages grow by 160.3%; and
  • wages for the top 0.1% grew more than twice as fast, up a spectacular 345.2%.
  • In contrast, those in the bottom 90% had annual wages grow by 26.0% from 1979 to 2019.

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 (SSA) 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 wage data are not top-coded, meaning the underlying earnings reported are actual earnings and not “capped” or “top-coded” for confidentiality. These SSA wage data are W-2 earnings, which include realized stock options and vested stock awards.

Figure A

Cumulative percent change in real annual wages, by wage group, 1979–2019

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%
2019 26.0% 51.8% 75.1% 160.3%
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Source: EPI analysis of Kopczuk, Saez, and Song (2007, Table A3) and Social Security Administration wage statistics

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Over the longer term, since 1979, there was far faster wage growth at the top (highest 1.0%) and tippy top (upper 0.1%), signaling a major redistribution upward from the bottom 90%. As Figure A shows, the top 1.0% of earners are now paid 160.3% 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 345.2% since 1979 (Table 1). In contrast, wages for the bottom 90% grew only 26.0% in that time. The other segments of the top 10% (those in the 90th–95th percentiles and 95th–99th percentiles) also had faster-than-average wage growth since 1979, up 51.8% and 75.1%, but nowhere near as fast as the wage growth at the top. Thus, wages have been redistributed upward since 1979 from the bottom 90% to the top 10% and within the top 10% to the top 1% and especially to the top 0.1%.

This pattern of upward wage distribution also prevailed over the recent recovery (since 2009): The bottom 90% experienced modest annual wage growth—reflecting growing annual hours as well as higher hourly wages—up 8.7% from 2009 to 2019. In contrast, the wages of the top 1.0% and top 0.1% grew, respectively, 20.4% and 30.3% in the last 10 years.

In the most recent year, however, wages grew fastest for the bottom 9% of the top 10% (up 4.2% for 90th–95th percentiles, up 2.2% for 95th–99th percentiles) and slower than average for the bottom 90% (up 1.7%) and the top 0.1% and top 1% (both up 1.0%).

One key characteristic of the Great Recession downturn was the big hit on the very highest earners, with the top 1% and top 0.1% seeing 15.6% and 26.1% declines over the two years from 2007 to 2009. Even by 2019 the top 0.1% had not recovered from this sharp fall at the start of the business cycle as the top 1% as a whole earned only 1.6% above their 2007 earnings. Thus, the business cycle from 2007 to 2019 was one in which wages were redistributed from the bottom 90% to the top 10% and within the top 10% from the top 1% to the remainder of the top 10% (the 90th–99th percentiles). The one constant wage dynamic in every period since 1979 has been that the wages for the bottom 90% are continuously redistributed upward.

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 1991 and 2019 the real median annual wage grew 23.8%, very close to the 26.0% growth for the bottom 90% over that same time period.

It is also noteworthy that the wage growth for the bottom 90% was almost entirely concentrated in the two periods of sustained low unemployment representing 11 of the 40 years: The bottom 90%’s wage growth in the 1995–2000 and 2013–2019 periods represented 90% of all the wage growth ($7,230 of $8,043) over the entire 1979–2019 period. The shift of wages away from the bottom 90% meant that their wages rose 26.0% rather than the 44.6% increase obtained on average over the 1979–2019 period, some 18.6 percentage points faster growth.

Table 1

Change in annual wages, by wage group, 1979–2019

Percent change
Average annual wages (2019 dollars)  Long-term Over 2007–2019 business cycle
Wage group 1979 2007 2009 2018 2019 1979–2007 1979–2019 2007–2009 2009–2019 2018–2019 2007–2019
Bottom 90% $30,880 $36,025 $35,806 $38,255 $38,923 16.7% 26.0% -0.6% 8.7% 1.7% 8.0%
90th–99th $101,001 $146,782 $146,401 $160,865 $165,782 45.3% 64.1% -0.3% 13.2% 3.1% 12.9%
90th–95th $85,648 $114,824 $115,898 $124,816 $129,998 34.1% 51.8% 0.9% 12.2% 4.2% 13.2%
95th–99th $120,193 $186,730 $184,529 $205,925 $210,511 55.4% 75.1% -1.2% 14.1% 2.2% 12.7%
Upper 5% $154,420 $298,646 $273,570 $314,953 $320,096 93.4% 107.3% -8.4% 17.0% 1.6% 7.2%
Upper 1% $291,329 $746,310 $629,736 $751,063 $758,434 156.2% 160.3% -15.6% 20.4% 1.0% 1.6%
99.0⁠th–⁠99.9th $251,619 $495,880 $453,504 $516,850 $521,794 97.1% 107.4% -8.5% 15.1% 1.0% 5.2%
99.9th–100th $648,725 $3,000,181 $2,215,819 $2,858,981 $2,888,192 362.5% 345.2% -26.1% 30.3% 1.0% -3.7%
Average $39,799 $53,096 $51,699 $56,416 $57,535 33.4% 44.6% -2.6% 11.3% 2.0% 8.4%

Source: EPI analysis of Kopczuk, Saez, and Song (2007) and Social Security Administration wage statistics.

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These disparities in long-term wage growth reflect a major redistribution upward of wages since 1979, as noted earlier. The bottom 90% earned 69.8% of all earnings in 1979 but only 60.9% in 2019 (Table 2). In contrast, the top 1.0% nearly doubled its share of earnings from 7.3% in 1979 to 13.2% in 2019. 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 5.0% in 2019.

Table 2

Change in wage groups' shares of total wages, 1979–2019

Share of wages Change in share (ppt.)
Long-term Over 2007–2019 business cycle
Wage group 1979 2007 2009 2018 2019 1979–2007 1979–2019 2007–2009 2009–2019 2018–2019 2007–2019
Bottom 90% 69.8% 61.1% 62.3% 61.0% 60.9% -8.8 -8.9 1.3 -1.4 -0.1 -0.2
90th–99th 22.8% 24.9% 25.5% 25.7% 25.9% 2.0 3.1 0.6 0.4 0.3 1.1
90th–95th 10.8% 10.8% 11.2% 11.1% 11.3% 0.1 0.5 0.4 0.1 0.2 0.5
95th–99th 12.1% 14.1% 14.3% 14.6% 14.6% 2.0 2.6 0.2 0.4 0.0 0.6
Upper 5% 19.4% 28.1% 26.5% 27.9% 27.8% 8.7 8.4 -1.7 1.5 -0.1 -0.3
Upper 1% 7.3% 14.1% 12.2% 13.3% 13.2% 6.7 5.9 -1.9 1.0 -0.1 -0.9
99.0th–⁠99.9th 5.7% 8.4% 7.9% 8.2% 8.2% 2.7 2.5 -0.5 0.4 -0.1 -0.2
99.9th–100th 1.6% 5.7% 4.3% 5.1% 5.0% 4.0 3.4 -1.4 0.7 0.0 -0.6

Source: EPI analysis of Kopczuk, Saez and Song (2007) and Social Security Administration wage statistics.

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The bottom 90% lost some ground over the recent business cycle, 2007–2019, as their wage share fell slightly, from 61.1% to 60.9%. The winners in the recent business cycle were not the top 1%, whose wage share fell from 14.1% to 13.2%. Rather, the upward redistribution of wages from the bottom 90% and the shift away from the top 1.0% in the recent business cycle accrued to the other high earners in the top 10%, those earning between the 90th and 95th percentiles (averaging $129,998 in 2019) and between the 95th and 99th percentiles (averaging $210,511 in 2019).