Middle-class wages are stagnant—Middle-wage workers' hourly wage is up 6% since 1979, low-wage workers' wages are down 5%, while those with very high wages saw a 41% increase: Cumulative change in real hourly wages of all workers, by wage percentile,* 1979–2013

YEAR Very high wage Middle wage Low wage
1979/01/01 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
1980/01/01 -1.90% -1.00% -5.50%
1981/01/01 -1.70% -3.60% -4.00%
1982/01/01 0.20% -2.20% -7.70%
1983/01/01 3.40% -2.70% -10.50%
1984/01/01 4.20% -2.20% -12.70%
1985/01/01 6.00% -1.30% -14.10%
1986/01/01 7.60% 0.50% -14.30%
1987/01/01 7.40% 0.60% -14.50%
1988/01/01 10.10% 0.00% -14.50%
1989/01/01 7.50% -0.60% -14.60%
1990/01/01 9.60% -0.60% -13.10%
1991/01/01 10.30% 0.00% -11.50%
1992/01/01 8.50% 0.80% -11.70%
1993/01/01 7.60% 0.10% -12.00%
1994/01/01 13.10% -1.60% -12.90%
1995/01/01 13.20% -2.40% -13.10%
1996/01/01 13.80% -2.80% -13.50%
1997/01/01 15.20% -0.50% -10.60%
1998/01/01 18.00% 2.30% -5.70%
1999/01/01 21.50% 5.40% -4.30%
2000/01/01 25.20% 5.10% -3.40%
2001/01/01 27.70% 7.40% -0.40%
2002/01/01 32.00% 8.30% 0.70%
2003/01/01 30.30% 9.60% 0.30%
2004/01/01 31.60% 9.60% -1.10%
2005/01/01 32.50% 8.30% -2.80%
2006/01/01 33.20% 8.70% -2.20%
2007/01/01 36.10% 7.80% -1.00%
2008/01/01 37.60% 8.30% -1.90%
2009/01/01 39.00% 10.10% -1.10%
2010/01/01 38.70% 8.60% -1.90%
2011/01/01 37.10% 5.70% -4.30%
2012/01/01 39.00% 5.00% -5.90%
2013/01/01 40.60% 6.10% -5.30%

 

* Low wage is 10th percentile, middle wage is 50th percentile, very high wage is 95th percentile.

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

Reproduced from Figure F in Why America’s Workers Need Faster Wage Growth—And What We Can Do About It

Source: EPI analysis of Current Population Survey Outgoing Rotation Group microdata from the CPS survey con­ducted by the Bureau of the Census for the Bureau of Labor Statistics [machine-readable microdata file]. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Census Bureau.

Reproduced from Figure F in Why America’s Workers Need Faster Wage Growth—And What We Can Do About It, by Elise Gould, Economic Policy Institute, 2014

View the underlying data on epi.org.