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Why no salary raises?

US employment is rising rapidly, so why isn’t pay?

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WASHINGTON: Where are the pay raises?

Employers in the United States are hiring at a brisk pace. Unemployme­nt has sunk to a nearly healthy rate. Jobs are being filled across a range of industries.

Yet the September jobs report released Friday contained a puzzling fact: Pay cheques still aren’t growing.

Economists regard stagnant wages as a red flag for the five-year-old recovery. Robust job growth has typically fueled rising wages. And without higher pay, workers have less money to spend and save – and that, in turn, keeps the economy from strengthen­ing further.

Whatever meager pay raises most workers have received in this recovery have been all but eaten up by low inflation. The average hourly wage for non-management workers has remained US$20.67 for two months. It’s risen just 2.3% year-over-year, just slightly above inflation.

It just might be the pivotal challenge for families as well as for the economy. The size of a paycheque shapes budgets for consumers, whose spending accounts for most of the US economy’s activity.

Weak pay gains, along with lower-thannormal inflation, will also influence when the Federal Reserve decides to start raising interest rates. Without more pay raises spreading across the economy, the Fed has less pressure to raise a key short-term rate from its record low near zero.

So why hasn’t vigorous hiring led to better paydays?

The last time monthly wage growth outpaced inflation in any meaningful way was from mid2006 through 2007, just before the Great Recession started. The unemployme­nt rate then ranged between 4.4% and 4.8%. If that pattern holds true, unemployme­nt would have to drop another full percentage point from its current 5.9% before wages break out of their funk.

Economists note that wages are generally a “lagging” indicator. What they mean is that pay typically starts rising well after the job market has shown significan­t improvemen­t. As the economy takes off, employers eventually need more workers to meet customer demand. Unless those companies boost pay, they often won’t attract enough qualified candidates for the jobs they want to fill.

Some economists think we might be close to that point already but say we might not know until months after the fact.

“We may find out six months from now that 6% was the trigger point,” said Maury Harris, an economist at the bank UBS.

As older, higher-paid baby boomers retire, they’re being replaced by younger workers who earn less. That demographi­c shift limits how much average pay can grow.

Recent college graduates are earning US$692 a week, according to a paper issued this year by the San Francisco Federal Reserve. That’s just shy of US$36,000 a year. It’s also slightly less than the average wage for all non-ma0nagemen­t workers – most of whom lack a college degree and the additional earnings power it carries.

Based on the jobs report, more young workers are flooding the job market and are willing to work for less, said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial.

Employers can reduce costs by hiring more 20-somethings who don’t have families to support. Or, they can dangle the possibilit­y of replacing their older workers with younger ones to limit pay hikes for their existing employees. “It’s much easier to lower an entrylevel wage than a wage for an existing worker,” Swonk said. “It’s also a bargaining chip that goes to employers over workers.”

After the most destructiv­e economic slump since the 1930s, it can take years to heal.

In a speech in August, Fed chair Janet Yellen floated an intriguing explanatio­n for lackluster wage growth: Employers seldom cut wages during a recession, even though it might, in theory, make financial sense to do so.

The reason they don’t is that wage cuts can break employee morale and possibly disrupt business. Since employers shouldered higher wages than they wanted to during the recession, they might be making up the difference by paying workers less during the recovery.

If true, this means wages may lag for a while longer. Yet once they do, they might “increase at a more rapid clip,” Bank of America suggested in an analysis Friday.

What’s more, lots of people have given up looking for work after being laid off during the recession. The government can track this trend by measuring the percentage of adults who either have a job or are looking for one.

This rate will decline naturally as waves of baby boomers retire. But some economists say the rate fell more during the recession than demographi­c trends alone would indicate. The rate was 62.7% in September, down 3.3 percentage points from just before the recession. A single percentage point represents about 1.5 million potential workers.

Some of the unemployed gave up their job searches long ago. So the government no longer considers them part of the labour force. – AP

 ??  ?? A file picture showing students attending a career fair in US. More young workers are flooding the job market and are willing to work for less. - AP
A file picture showing students attending a career fair in US. More young workers are flooding the job market and are willing to work for less. - AP

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