An employee on the assembly line at the Subaru of Indiana Automotive Inc. in Lafayette, Indiana.—Bloomberg file photo
An employee on the assembly line at the Subaru of Indiana Automotive Inc. in Lafayette, Indiana.—Bloomberg file photo

The economy today has almost everything experts look for as a sign of health — new jobs are popping up around the country, the unemployment rate has fallen to the lowest level in a decade, and consumer and business confidence is high. But one thing that really matters for workers has been stubbornly absent: strong wage growth.

The pay that workers take home has risen a little since the depths of the recession, but not much.

Once you factor in inflation, wages growth is so low that workers are hardly better off than they were a year ago. Over the past year, average hourly earnings have risen just 2.5pc, according to last Friday’s report on April job growth.

The trend is disappointing — and somewhat surprising. Given strong job growth and low unemployment, many economists had been expecting that wages would be rising faster by now.


Given strong job growth and low unemployment, many economists had been expecting that wages would be rising faster by now


As the economy continues to heat up and companies create more job opportunities, employers should eventually have a harder time finding the calibre of workers that they want. To attract good workers, companies in theory have to start offering pay increases.

But in practice, wage growth has remained relatively sluggish. As Bernie Bowmal of the Economic Outlook Group pointed out Friday on American Public Media’s ‘Marketplace,’ 2.5pc is precisely the same wage growth seen in 2009, when the jobless rate stood at 10pc — twice the current level.

Current wage growth “is not what we would expect at this point in a recovery,” said Tara Sinclair, an economist at George Washington University and a senior fellow at jobs site Indeed. “We would think employers would be competing with each other and that we would see that competition reflected in wages.”

No one knows precisely why wage growth has lagged behind, but economists have a few explanations.

• Too many people left on the sidelines: Since the recession, the unemployment rate has not been a great indicator of how much slack is left in the labour market.

That’s because the unemployment rate, which was a low 4.4pc in April, counts only workers who do not have a job but are still actively looking for one. Economists argue that the harsh conditions of the recession persuaded many Americans to give up looking for work altogether. Young people moved back in with their parents, workers went on disability and older employees opted for early retirement.

Some of those people have gradually started looking for jobs again as the economy has heated up. But sluggish wage growth may imply that a lot of these people are still left on the sidelines of the economy, and that they might be willing to start looking for work again as their prospects improve.

Elise Gould, a senior economist at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute, said that relatively sluggish wage growth “tells us that there’s still a fair amount of slack left in the labour market. The unemployment rate is missing part of the story of workers continuing to be sidelined.”

Gould points to the employment-to-population ratio for prime-age workers, which measures the proportion of the population between the prime working ages of 25 and 54 who are employed. That figure stood at 78.6pc in April, still significantly below where it was in 2007 and for most of 2008.

“We have recovered a fair amount, but we still have a way to go,” Gould said. “If there was less slack, then employers would have to be offering better pay to attract and retain the workers they want, and they just don’t have to yet.”

• We’re not getting much more productive: Other economists find different reasons for lagging wage growth. One is that gains in productivity — a measure of how much a given worker or machine can produce — have also been sluggish of late. That is a worrying sign, since productivity gains are what really determines improvements in wealth and living standards over generations.

But blaming productivity for slow wages is not a full explanation, because economists in turn debate the reasons behind sluggish productivity. Some fault measurement issues. Some point a finger at government policies that have failed to encourage investments in machinery and technology. Others say it could just be because of natural ebbs and flows in innovation.

In addition to trends in productivity, weak growth in wages may reflect the difficulty workers have asserting their bargaining position in the current environment, Lawson said.

A dramatic decline in unionisation in recent decades has left workers less able to bargain with company owners for pay increases. At the same time, globalisation has allowed companies to be more mobile than ever before. If labour gets too expensive in one location, companies can just move.

• So what does that means for the Federal Reserve? Gould and other labour-friendly economists see these trends as ample reason for the Federal Reserve to hold off on raising interest rates.

But other analysts see the threat of emerging inflation as a bigger risk, and believe the Fed should act now to raise interest rates to more normal levels.

— The Washington Post Service

Published in Dawn, The Business and Finance Weekly, May 15th, 2017

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