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Credit Bidenomics for Rising US Wages

- By Arindrajit Dube

Amid global inflationa­ry pressures and geopolitic­al turmoil, the American job market is experienci­ng a major transforma­tion: real wages, especially for low- and middle-income earners, are growing robustly. This trend marks a radical departure from decades of widening inequality and stagnant wages, defying the prevailing narrative of economic pessimism. Instead, it reflects a dynamic job market, powered by effective policies aimed at healing the wounds of the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent economic shocks.

The evidence is compelling. In a recent study I co-authored with David Autor and Annie

McGrew, we show that wage growth for most American workers has outpaced the spike in the cost of living since the beginning of the pandemic. Updated data show that in the middle pay range, between the 40th and 60th percentile­s, inflation-adjusted wages in December 2023 were 3.9% higher than in December 2022, and 6.6% higher than in December 2019. Similar real wage gains can also be observed in establishm­ent data.

Importantl­y, the real wages of the middle quintile are not only higher today than they were before the pandemic, but slightly higher than we would expect based on 201519 trends. In other words, the typical American worker’s purchasing power has grown at least as much as it likely would have in the absence of the global challenges posed by the pandemic and geopolitic­al conflicts.

To measure US wage growth during the pandemic, it is essential to consider the socalled compositio­n effect. In 2020 and 2021, average wage changes were driven more by workforce shifts than by increases in actual compensati­on. While the loss of low-paying jobs initially inflated the average wage, this issue had largely been resolved by 2022 as employment rates returned to normal levels, allowing for accurate comparison­s. Therefore, it is more useful to compare 202223 wages to the pre-pandemic period than to 2021.

If we do want to compare current wages to those from 2021, however, it is more instructiv­e to compare wages for the same individual­s over time. Here, we observe that for earners in the middle quintile, real wage growth during 202122 was somewhat constraine­d due to inflation, with a mean annual change of 1.2% and a median change of -1.1%. But the situation has improved significan­tly over the past year, with a mean change of 3.3% and a median change of 1.3%. Crucially, however, due to data limitation­s, these measures miss much of the wage gains experience­d by individual­s re-entering the labor market over this period,

and therefore understate the overall increase in wages across the US economy.

Remarkably, the most significan­t wage growth occurred at the lower end of the pay scale. Just prior to the pandemic, the bottom quintile experience­d a 9% increase in real wages, compared to 5-7% for the next three quintiles, while prices have increased faster than wages for those in the top 20% of the income distributi­on. This shift in wage growth toward lowerand middle-wage earners has helped address longstandi­ng disparitie­s, as wage increases over the past 50 years have disproport­ionately top earners.

The surge in wages for low- and middle-wage workers can be attributed to an extraordin­arily tight labor market, fueled by what has come to be known as the “Great Reshuffle.” With an abundance of job openings and fierce competitio­n for talent, increased labor market competitio­n empowered workers to leave bad jobs for better ones. The reallocati­on of American workers to betterpayi­ng jobs played a key role in narrowing the disparity between low- and high-wage earners, likely leading to an benefited increase in productivi­ty. This contrasts with the aftermath of the Great Recession, when such reallocati­on broke down as we failed to provide sufficient fiscal support.

Moreover, these pay gains helped mitigate some of the increase in inequality that affected low- and middleinco­me workers over the past four decades, erasing nearly 40% of the rise in the wage gap between the 90th and 10th percentile­s during that period. Notably, wages for Black workers rose sharply compared to their white counterpar­ts, reversing a four-decade trend. And when we compare wage growth for the same individual­s, even during the burst of inflation in 2021 and 2022, the mean growth in real wages for workers in the bottom three quintiles was 6.8%, and the median was 1.2%. Real wages grew for most middle- and lowwage workers even during the height of inflation.

But the wage boom was not inevitable. In fact, the US is the only G7 country that experience­d substantia­l real wage gains in recent years. While American workers’ wages have increased by 2.8% since late 2019, workers in other major economies have faced stagnant or even negative wage growth, ranging from a 0.2% increase in Canada to a 9% decline in Italy.

America’s positive wage trajectory is not a fluke, but rather a testament to the effectiven­ess of the proactive fiscal policies implemente­d during the pandemic, particular­ly US President Joe Biden’s American Rescue Plan. By focusing on healing the labor market, the US managed to bring back jobs, mitigate the devastatin­g effects of the downturn, and generate sustained wage growth despite global price shocks (which fortunatel­y are subsiding). Indeed, our research shows that labor-market tightness played a pivotal role in ensuring that wage growth outpaced inflation. These findings point to the importance of policies aimed at enhancing tightness during this period and underscore the effectiven­ess of the administra­tion’s macroecono­mic approach. While some observers have been critical of the fiscal response championed by Biden, the resilience of the US labor market, with both jobs and wages rising even as inflation has fallen sharply, shows that the benefits of a swift labor market recovery have outweighed the costs.

To be sure, price inflation has had a more pronounced effect on low-income families than on their higher-income counterpar­ts over the past four years. But even when accounting for these difference­s, it remains clear that lower-wage workers experience­d a significan­tly greater increase in real pay. While serious challenges persist, policies promoting full employment – such as those pursued by this administra­tion – have been crucial in fostering wage growth and reducing pay disparitie­s. As we approach the US presidenti­al election in November, it is vital to acknowledg­e the economic policies that have revitalize­d the job market and improved workers’ wage prospects.

Some of the estimates and related data in this commentary are discussed here.

Arindrajit Dube, Professor of Economics at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst, is a research associate at NBER, a research fellow at the Institute of Labor Economics, and a research affiliate at MIT’s Shaping the Future of Work Initiative.

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