We need low unemployment to help pay growth keep pace with productivity: How much productivity growth exceeded pay growth on an average annual basis in low-, medium-, and high-unemployment years, 1949–2017
Category | Annual average of difference between productivity and pay growth |
---|---|
Lowest unemployment years | 0.09% |
Medium unemployment years | 0.71% |
Highest unemployment years | 1.26% |
Notes: Bars represent average annual difference between productivity growth and growth in hourly pay for typical workers for years with the highest, lowest, and medium unemployment rates from 1949 to 2017. Lowest unemployment group includes the 17 years with the lowest rates of unemployment in the 68-year sample, highest unemployment group includes the 17 years with the highest rates of unemployment in the sample, and medium unemployment group includes the 34 remaining years in the sample.
Notes: Bars represent average annual difference between productivity growth and growth in hourly pay for typical workers for years with the highest, lowest, and medium unemployment rates from 1949 to 2017. Lowest unemployment group includes the 17 years with the lowest rates of unemployment in the 68-year sample, highest unemployment group includes the 17 years with the highest rates of unemployment in the sample, and medium unemployment group includes the 34 remaining years in the sample. The growth of the productivity–pay gap is highlighted in EPI’s Productivity–Pay Tracker (epi.org/productivity-pay-gap).
Source: Adapted from Figure A in Josh Bivens, Wage Growth Is Being Held Back by Political Decisions and the Trump Administration Is on the Wrong Side of Key Debates, Economic Policy Institute, August 2019.
Source: Adapted from Figure A in Josh Bivens, Wage Growth Is Being Held Back by Political Decisions and the Trump Administration Is on the Wrong Side of Key Debates, Economic Policy Institute, August 2019. Data are from EPI analysis of unpublished Total Economy Productivity data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Labor Productivity and Costs program, wage data from BLS Current Employment Statistics, BLS Employment Cost Trends, BLS Consumer Price Index, Bureau of Economic Analysis National Income and Product Accounts, and BLS Current Population Survey public data.
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