Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

4Q worker compensati­on slows

Sluggish 0.9% rise in pay, benefits fuels hopes of rate cut

- CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER

WASHINGTON — Pay and benefits for America’s workers grew in the final three months of last year at the slowest pace in 2½ years, a trend that could affect the Federal Reserve’s decision about when to begin cutting interest rates.

Compensati­on as measured by the government’s Employment Cost Index rose 0.9% in the October-December quarter, down from a 1.1% increase in the previous quarter, the Labor Department said last week. Compared with the same quarter a year earlier, compensati­on growth slowed from 4.3% to 4.2%.

The increase in wages and benefits was still mostly healthy, but the slowdown could contribute to the cooling of inflation and will likely be welcomed by Federal Reserve policymake­rs. The Fed kept its short-term rate unchanged after its latest policy meeting last week.

“Not great news for our paychecks, but good news for inflation and the prospect of meaningful” interest rate cuts by the Fed, said James Knightley, chief internatio­nal economist for European bank ING.

While Fed officials have signaled they will lower their benchmark rate this year, they haven’t signaled when they will begin, a decision eagerly awaited by Wall Street investors and many businesses. The slowing wage gains could make the Fed more comfortabl­e cutting its rate as early as March, economists said.

Still, most analysts expect the first cut will happen in May or June.

When the Fed reduces its rate, it typically lowers the cost of mortgages, auto loans, credit card rates and business borrowing.

The pace of worker compensati­on plays a big role in businesses’ labor costs. When pay accelerate­s especially fast, it increases the labor costs of companies, which often respond by raising their prices. This cycle can perpetuate inflation, which the Fed is assessing in deciding when to adjust its influentia­l benchmark rate.

Since the pandemic, wages on average have grown at a historical­ly rapid pace, before adjusting for inflation. Many companies have had to offer much higher pay to attract and keep workers. Yet hiring has moderated in recent months, to levels closer those that prevailed before the pandemic. The more modest job gains have reduced pressure on companies to offer big pay gains.

The Federal Reserve considers the ECI one of the most important gauges of wages and benefits because it measures how pay changes for the same sample of jobs. Other measures, such as average hourly pay, can be artificial­ly boosted as a result of, say, widespread layoffs among lower-paid workers.

Even as wage increases slow, inflation has fallen further, leaving Americans with better pay gains after adjusting for rising prices. After taking inflation into account, pay rose 0.9% in last year’s fourth quarter, compared with a year earlier, up from a 0.6% annual gain in the previous quarter.

Growth in pay and benefits, as measured by the ECI, peaked at 5.1% in the fall of 2022. Yet at that time, inflation was rising much faster than it is now, thereby reducing Americans’ overall buying power. The Fed’s goal is to slow inflation so that even smaller pay increases can result in inflation-adjusted income gains.

 ?? (AP/Chris Carlson) ?? Workers build a home in September in Marshall, N.C.
(AP/Chris Carlson) Workers build a home in September in Marshall, N.C.

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