Top earners' wages grew four times faster than wages at the median: Cumulative change in real hourly wages of all workers, by wage percentile, 1979–2018

10th percentile 50th percentile 95th percentile
1979 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
1980 -6.7% -0.6% -1.8%
1981 -8.1% -1.7% -1.5%
1982 -11.8% -2.1% 0.5%
1983 -14.7% -1.9% 3.5%
1984 -16.4% -1.4% 3.9%
1985 -17.5% 0.1% 6.1%
1986 -17.2% 0.8% 8.6%
1987 -17.3% 1.9% 11.6%
1988 -16.5% 0.5% 14.3%
1989 -17.1% 0.3% 7.7%
1990 -16.5% 0.2% 9.1%
1991 -15.1% -0.6% 10.6%
1992 -14.4% 0.4% 8.8%
1993 -13.1% 1.9% 6.6%
1994 -13.8% 0.8% 12.4%
1995 -14.7% -0.6% 12.7%
1996 -15.7% -2.3% 13.4%
1997 -13.2% -0.3% 14.8%
1998 -7.8% 3.3% 18.3%
1999 -6.1% 5.9% 21.5%
2000 -6.7% 6.5% 24.9%
2001 -3.8% 8.2% 27.0%
2002 -0.8% 9.8% 31.6%
2003 -1.2% 9.9% 30.5%
2004 -3.0% 11.1% 31.7%
2005 -5.3% 9.5% 32.0%
2006 -5.9% 9.9% 33.2%
2007 -4.3% 10.1% 35.5%
2008 -3.2% 9.3% 36.3%
2009 -2.4% 11.7% 39.4%
2010 -3.2% 11.0% 38.6%
2011 -5.7% 8.2% 37.3%
2012 -7.3% 6.9% 39.0%
2013 -6.7% 7.4% 41.4%
2014 -5.9% 7.5% 39.4%
2015 -1.4% 9.3% 48.3%
2016 -0.6% 11.2% 49.8%
2017 3.5% 12.2% 52.0%
2018 4.1% 14.0%  56.1%

 

Notes: Shaded areas denote recessions. The xth-percentile wage is the wage at which x% of wage earners earn less and (100−x)% earn more.

Source: EPI analysis of Current Population Survey Outgoing Rotation Group microdata

View the underlying data on epi.org.