Business Standard

Here’s why robust US job market isn’t producing better pay

- SHO CHANDRA 15 April

Growth in Americans’ wages has been levelling off lately, contrary to expectatio­ns that a steadily falling jobless rate will quickly lead to a sustained accelerati­on.

Blame it on dismal productivi­ty and lingering, albeit diminishin­g, slack even with unemployme­nt at an almost 10-year low of 4.5 per cent.

The government’s most recent jobs report showed the underemplo­yment rate — the broadest gauge of joblessnes­s because it also includes marginally attached workers and those working part time who’d prefer a full-time position — also has been falling though it’s still higher than just before the 2007-2009 recession.

Data this week were also less encouragin­g. The quits rate, a gauge of workers’ willingnes­s to voluntaril­y leave their jobs because they’re confident of finding a better position, eased in February to 2.1 per cent, matching its average since the end of 2015. Faster turnover would imply workers are able to bargain for more as labour demand exceeds supply.

Weak productivi­ty is also behind employers’ reluctance to fatten paychecks. Because firms are hiring lots of workers and output is expanding slowly, they’re trying to protect their profits at a time when raising prices has become difficult. Over the last five years, productivi­ty growth has averaged 0.7 per cent a quarter, the slowest since a similar period ending 1982. That “is certainly dampening” wage gains, Joseph LaVorgna, chief US economist for Deutsche Bank Securities, wrote in a note to clients.

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen this week called low productivi­ty a “significan­t problem” and said the reasons behind it were unclear, making it hard to predict when there’d be a pickup.

Another hurdle is that companies usually raise wages by at least the rate of inflation, which is only just starting to stir after being stubbornly low the past few years, said Ryan Sweet, an economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. At some businesses, organised labour groups could use a pickup in prices to negotiate bigger pay increases. Of course, faster inflation would also circle back to squeeze real takehome earnings for everyone.

Projection­s vary on the extent and timing of any wagegrowth accelerati­on. Economists at Capital Economics point out that the share of small companies planning to increase worker compensati­on is consistent with annual growth in average hourly earnings advancing toward 3.5 per cent by yearend. At Bank of America Merrill Lynch, analysts project 3 per cent by early 2018. From current levels, that indicates modest further gains the rest of 2017.

Even the improvemen­t in pay growth has yet to spread to all industries. In March, for example, average hourly earnings in profession­al and business services posted the second-biggest monthly advance in records to 2006. Without that 0.9 per cent jump last month, overall wage growth would have been flat, according to Morgan Stanley economist Robert Rosener.

What’s worse, “wage growth in a broad range of industries may be levelling off, or even slowing,” Rosener cautioned last week in a note. Morgan Stanley’s wage growth diffusion index shows only 38.5 per cent of industries now have above-trend rates, down from February’s 46.2 per cent and well below a high of 61.5 per cent in August.

In the meantime, consumer confidence surveys show widespread optimism that bigger paychecks are on the horizon.

While hopes are riding high, actual wage performanc­e is what counts in terms of household spending and the economy. BLOOMBERG

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