Santa Fe New Mexican

Want a big raise? You may have to quit your job

- By Christophe­r Rugaber Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Despite one of the best job markets in decades, workers across the U.S. economy are struggling with a common frustratio­n: What does it take to finally get a decent raise?

It turns out you might have to quit your job.

Americans who leave their employers to take a new job are enjoying pay raises that are one-third larger than raises for workers who stay put — a gap that has reached the widest point since the Great Recession.

At the same time, retail and restaurant workers are receiving more generous raises than manufactur­ing workers are.

And America’s CEOs are getting some of the biggest pay gains of all.

At a time when the average annual wage increase for U.S. workers as a whole remains surprising­ly modest given the robust job market, those groups of workers are doing better than average.

Others aren’t faring as well. Pay raises for people who have stayed in the

same job for the past year, for example, remain relatively stagnant. That trend has confounded some economists. Many had expected that companies would have to pay more to retain employees at a time when workers are harder to find and the unemployme­nt rate, at 3.9 percent, is near a 50-year low.

Nationally, average hourly pay rose 2.7 percent in July from a year earlier, before adjusting for inflation. That is modest by historical standards. The last time unemployme­nt was this low, in the late 1990s, pay raises for Americans as a whole averaged roughly 4 percent.

And once you factor in inflation, average hourly pay has declined slightly over the past 12 months.

With midterm elections looming, the Trump administra­tion is pushing back against the notion that paychecks aren’t growing. In a report released Wednesday, the White House’s top economist, Kevin Hassett, asserted that pay is rising if you consider benefits such as health care, an alternativ­e gauge of inflation and the impact of tax cuts.

Yet even by the White House’s own measure, wage increases have slowed over the past three years.

Here are some ways in which average pay growth varies depending on the category of worker:

New job, big raise

It would seem fundamenta­l: If you want a decent raise, find a new job. But it doesn’t always work that way. For the first six years after the 2008-09 Great Recession, people who switched jobs received raises that were scarcely better than those for workers who stayed in their jobs.

But since then, the switchers have commanded steadily better raises than the stayers. In July, wages for job switchers grew 3.8 percent from a year earlier, compared with 2.9 percent for those who stayed behind, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. In February and March this year, that gap reached 1.7 percentage points, the widest disparity since August 2001.

Yet the figures also illustrate how pay is still lagging compared with previous periods of brisk job growth. Even the pay gains for job-switchers are relatively modest compared with periods in the past. Before the recession, job switchers received annual raises of nearly 5 percent. In the late 1990s, they topped 6 percent. Even adjusting for inflation, job switchers fared better in the late 1990s than they do now.

Lower-paid make gains

For six years after the recession, the lowest-paid workers received the thinnest wage gains — and in several years their pay declined. Yet since 2015, they have clawed back some of those losses.

For the lowest-paid one-fifth of the workforce, wages rose 2.3 percent in 2017, adjusted for inflation, according to the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal think tank. That topped the average for middle-income workers, whose pay gains inched up just 0.2 percent.

It’s also ahead of the richest one-tenth of workers, whose pay rose 1.9 percent. Low-paid workers also saw a huge gain in 2016 that ran far ahead of middleinco­me and wealthy employees.

What’s driving the outsize increases for lower-paid workers?

More than 20 states have raised their minimum wages above the federal minimum of $7.25, some of them substantia­lly higher. The minimum is now $11 in California, for example, and $11.50 in Washington state.

The ultra-low unemployme­nt rate has also helped. Many businesses say they are desperate to find workers.

CEOs still raking it in

Even as poorer workers have fared better, CEOs, not surprising­ly, have done best.

In 2017, the chief executives of the 350 largest publicly traded U.S. companies reported, on average, an increase in compensati­on of nearly 18 percent, according to a report by the Economic Policy Institute. That compares with a puny raise of just 0.3 percent for all other workers in the same industries. Both figures are adjusted for inflation.

Larry Mishel, senior economist at EPI, said CEO pay jumped largely because it is closely tied to the health of the stock market. The S&P 500 stock index soared 22 percent in 2017. Most CEO pay comes in the form of stock options.

The pay of CEOs of the largest firms still averaged nearly $11 million that year, according to the EPI’s figures.

In 2017, large-company CEOs made $18.9 million, on average. That is 312 times the average pay of workers in the same industries, which reached $62,431 last year.

Whites, Latinos

White Americans, on average, earn much more than AfricanAme­ricans or Latinos. The gap between whites and Latinos has narrowed very slightly in the past three years as wage gains have begun to pick up across the economy. For whites and Latinos pay rose 0.9 percent adjusted for inflation last year; for AfricanAme­ricans, it fell 0.5 percent. Latinos received the biggest raises in 2016; whites earned the most in 2015.

Manufactur­ing lags

Workers in some industries have also done better. In July, restaurant­s and bars handed out raises of 4 percent from a year earlier, before taking inflation into account. Pay for constructi­on workers increased 3.2 percent. Even retail workers’ pay grew 2.9 percent, slightly better than the average.

Yet for manufactur­ing workers, pay has risen just 1.2 percent in the past year even as hiring has accelerate­d. U.S. factories are increasing­ly using temporary workers, who typically receive less pay. Temp workers now make up roughly 12 percent of manufactur­ing workers, according to the EPI.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Americans who quit to take new jobs are enjoying pay raises that are one-third larger than raises for workers who stay put, a gap that has reached the widest point since the Great Recession.
LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Americans who quit to take new jobs are enjoying pay raises that are one-third larger than raises for workers who stay put, a gap that has reached the widest point since the Great Recession.

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