Real annual earnings of the bottom 90% saw consistent gains only when the labor market was the tightest: Cumulative change in real annual earnings of the bottom 90%, 1979–2018, and annualized change over specified periods

Year Bottom 90% Bottom 90% Bottom 90% Bottom 90%
1979 0.0%
1980 -2.2%
1981 -2.6%
1982 -3.9%
1983 -3.7%
1984 -1.8%
1985 -1.0%
1986 1.1%
1987 2.1%
1988 2.2%
1989 1.8%
1990 1.1%
1991 0.0%
1992 1.5%
1993 0.9%
1994 2.0%
1995 2.8% 2.8%
1996 4.1%
1997 7.0%
1998 11.0%
1999 13.2%
2000 15.3% 15.3%
2001 15.7%
2002 15.6%
2003 15.7%
2004 15.6%
2005 15.0%
2006 15.7%
2007 16.7%
2008 16.0%
2009 16.0%
2010 15.2%
2011 14.5%
2012 14.6%
2013 15.1%
2014 16.6% 16.6%
2015 20.5%
2016 21.0%
2017 22.2%
2018 23.9%
Years Annual growth rate
1979-1995 0.2%
1995-2000 2.3%
2000-2014 0.1%
2014-2018 1.5%

Note: Shaded areas denote recessions.

Source: EPI analysis of Kopczuk, Saez, and Song, Earnings Inequality and Mobility in the United States: Evidence from Social Security Data Since 1937 (2010), Table A3, and Social Security Administration wage statistics, as constructed by Mishel and Kassa; see “Top 1.0% of Earners See Wages Up 157.8% Since 1979” (December 2019)

View the underlying data on epi.org.