The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Essential workers say pay increases still not enough

Report: Only 9% of those earning less than $25,000 annually can keep up with cost of living

- By Ella Ceron Bloomberg

Wages are rising for workers considered essential during the COVID-19 pandemic, but few consider themselves fairly paid.

These are some of the findings by software company Payscale, which analyzed nearly 268,000 salary profiles and found that pay has climbed for a number of workers, including house cleaners, nurses and food service employees. Servers saw the largest gains with an increase to $21,300 annually this year from $17,100 in 2019, and about a third of wait staff surveyed consider their wages to be fair.

It’s a smaller proportion for the 29 other job roles in the study. Just 11% of nonprofit program directors consider their pay to be adequate, even with their annual salary projected to rise 12% to $62,900 this year versus in 2019.

Pay increases recorded between 2019 and 2022 have been nullified by an inflation rate that has quintupled over that period. A separate report by the Capital One Insights Center in March 2020 found that only 9% of people earning less than $25,000 annually said their wages kept up with the cost of living, compared to 31% of those earning more than $100,000 a year who said the same.

Employees’ perception of pay transparen­cy at their companies also was a crucial factor in their decision to stay, the study found. Workers who said their employer offered the least amount of transparen­cy were 88% more likely to find a new job than those who said their employer offered the most amount of pay transparen­cy. Similarly, workers who said their bosses offered the least amount of communicat­ion were six times more likely to seek a new job than those whose managers offered the most.

If low-income workers move to new roles, their wage gains are unlikely to last. Job listings for eight roles covered by the study would result in a loss of income, and four would result in no pay increase at all.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Payscale analyzed nearly 268,000salary profiles and found that pay has climbed for a number of essential workers including house cleaners, nurses, and food service employees.
KATHY WILLENS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Payscale analyzed nearly 268,000salary profiles and found that pay has climbed for a number of essential workers including house cleaners, nurses, and food service employees.

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