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  • Why Wages Lag

    l
    Interesting analysis of lack of wage growth:

    Why Wages Lag

    By Robert J. Samuelson
    January 18 at 7:39 PM

    The great wage mystery deepens. In economic recoveries, there usually comes a time when strong job gains lead to strong wage gains. Businesses must pay more to recruit and retain the workers they need. Not this time — or at least not yet. The unemployment rate has dropped from a peak of 10 percent in October 2009 to 5.6 percent at the end of 2014. But hourly wage gains haven’t accelerated. They’ve plodded along at about a 2 percent annual rate, roughly matching inflation.


    Economists are baffled. “This labor market recovery looks different from anything since World War II,” says University of Chicago economist Steven Davis. Depending on the indicator, the job market appears either tight or loose. Low unemployment rates suggest tight, Davis says. So does the average time it takes firms to fill a vacancy; at nearly 25 days, it is just above levels before the Great Recession. But weak wage growth and the high share of jobless out of work for more than six months — a third of all unemployment — indicate a loose market.


    The answer matters. The Federal Reserve is considering whether to begin raising interest rates to preempt higher inflation. By the unemployment figure alone, that would seem justified. It’s near levels that, in the past, risked a wage-price spiral. But the evidence of a loose job market argues against raising interest rates, which (in this view) would needlessly condemn countless Americans to unemployment or short hours.


    The debate concerns the so-called “natural rate of unemployment,” also known as the NAIRU. This is the unemployment rate at which increasing wage pressures spill over into higher price inflation. (NAIRU stands for the “non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment” — the term attests to economists’ capacity to confuse the public.) The Congressional Budget Office puts the NAIRU at 5.7 percent; that’s a mainstream estimate.


    But many economists, on both left and right, think the NAIRU may have shifted down. “We’re nowhere near the NAIRU,” says Josh Bivens of the left-of-center Economic Policy Institute. Economist Michael Strain of the conservative American Enterprise Institute agrees. By itself, the unemployment rate no longer accurately reflects the state of the job market, he says.


    “We can add over 200,000 jobs a month and have the unemployment rate drop without being terribly concerned about inflation,” he argues.

    Despite its title, the “natural” rate of unemployment isn’t natural. It can shift to reflect different laws, economic conditions or working populations. If present estimates are outdated, it’s unclear what new estimates should be. As Bivens notes, predictions of the NAIRU have been notoriously unreliable. Economists can best identify it with hindsight, when the data show how the unemployment rate and inflation interact.

    Still, wages are the crux of the matter. Why are they lagging? Theories abound. Here are four.


    ● Shadow unemployment: The recession and weak recovery caused millions of unemployed and discouraged workers to stop looking for jobs. This meant they weren’t counted by the government as unemployed. But many would like a job, expanding the pool of available workers and reducing wage pressures. A study by Jared Bernstein — formerly Vice President Biden’s chief economist — supports this theory.


    ● Job insecurity: Workers tend to stick with their present jobs because they fear they won’t find new ones. Therefore, employers don’t have to raise wages as much to keep good workers or recruit new workers. Research by economists Davis and John Haltiwanger of the University of Maryland confirms that the job market has grown “less fluid.” Workers change firms less often.


    ● Delayed pay cuts: Companies have skimped on annual pay increases because they didn’t sharply reduce pay in the Great Recession, as they might have. Their reluctance reflected popular hostility to outright wage cuts and fears that, if imposed, deep cuts would harm morale and performance. (Economists’ obscure term for this phenomenon is “downward wage rigidity.”) Instead, employers have trimmed annual wage increases, argue studies by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.


    More competition and less protection: For years, liberal commentators have contended that intensified global competition, inadequate minimum wages and shrinking union jobs have undermined workers’ bargaining power. Wages for many workers are weak, by this theory, because market forces are too strong.


    No one knows whether all — or none — of these theories are correct. What seems true is that, one way or another, the mechanism connecting low unemployment to rising wages and higher inflation has weakened. We don’t know by how much or for how long. The NAIRU has probably dropped, but (again) we don’t know by how much or for how long.

    Given this vast ignorance, the Federal Reserve is proceeding cautiously. It seems uneager to raise interest rates absent stronger evidence of inflationary pressures. Uncertainty about the global economy similarly counsels caution. This is sensible.

    Read more from Robert Samuelson’s archive.





  • #2
    Re: Why Wages Lag

    Is it possible to run numbers such as "average corporate gross/net profit per employee"?

    I would think this would be easy enough to parse for public entities, but private entities not so much.

    The reason I ask is that if it were easy enough to do, you could compare/contrast corporate GP/NP per FTE(full time equivalent) employee against average wages per FTE.

    Wouldn't that be relevant?

    For example, if every company had Google-like Gross/Net Profit they'd probably be able to accept wage inflation more easily.

    But if an increasing proportion of FTEs are working McJobs with far lower GP/NP per FTE, there might be a hard ceiling in terms of scope to accept wage inflation.

    Does average NP per FTE compared to average FTE wages matter in the equation compared to historical trends?

    Does that make any sense or hold any potential value?

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Why Wages Lag

      I suspect they can accept wage inflation as long as they can quietly see $Billions in new shares and the market bids up share prices.

      But, I'm sure Mr Zuckerberg has a FB financial driver for pushing FWD.US - the more tech workers you can import the more pressure there will be on wages.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Why Wages Lag

        Off the top of my head, unemployment was around 4.5% in 2003 and people were angry at Bush because it was TOO HIGH.

        Now 5.6% is . . . low?



        The reason why there isn't any wage growth is because unemployment is still . . . too . . . .

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Why Wages Lag

          Originally posted by Streaky View Post
          Off the top of my head, unemployment was around 4.5% in 2003 and people were angry at Bush because it was TOO HIGH.
          Discarding the die-hard Democrats who were angry at Bush just because he is a Republican, I guess it's all relative. To go from a very low unemployment rate and rapidly rising wages thanks to the dot-com bubble to 4.5% unemployment rates with stagnant wages is quite a come down. I suspect it's something China is going to feel when they go from 8% - 10% GDP growth rates to 4% growth rates. 4% GDP growth isn't too bad but coming from 8% or so, it'll feel like a Great Depression.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Why Wages Lag

            In 2004 U-6 unemployment was 9.9 - the widely reported unemployment number is bogus.

            http://www.bls.gov/schedule/archives/empsit_nr.htm#2004

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Why Wages Lag

              It is always entertaining to watch Central Banker/Economists literally bet the farm to destrupt the signaling mechinisms in the economy so that bad news is defered or directed to some kind of bit bucket to make it disappear then wonder why economy has unreasonable contridictions and that the economy is not performing. Its kind of like a house cat that has finally killed the mouse it has been playing with for hours slapping at it disappointed that it won't move any more.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Why Wages Lag
                It is always entertaining to watch Central Banker/Economists literally bet the farm to destrupt the signaling mechinisms in the economy so that bad news is defered or directed to some kind of bit bucket to make it disappear then wonder why economy has unreasonable contridictions and that the economy is not performing. Its kind of like a house cat that has finally killed the mouse it has been playing with for hours slapping at it disappointed that it won't move any more.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Why Wages Lag

                  11.2% now.

                  http://portalseven.com/employment/un...nt_rate_u6.jsp

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Why Wages Lag

                    Speaking as an employer of non-skilled manufacturing workers in the Southeast US, we have seen no wage pressure for new hires as of yet. The macro-economy has alleviated some of our doubts about market demands and we had a growth year, but still not confidently staffing-up. Entry level workers abound at $8-$8.50 starting wage today in our area.
                    "...the western financial system has already failed. The failure has just not yet been realized, while the system remains confident that it is still alive." Jesse

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Why Wages Lag

                      Originally posted by rjwjr View Post
                      Speaking as an employer of non-skilled manufacturing workers in the Southeast US, we have seen no wage pressure for new hires as of yet. The macro-economy has alleviated some of our doubts about market demands and we had a growth year, but still not confidently staffing-up. Entry level workers abound at $8-$8.50 starting wage today in our area.
                      I'm curious. (I've never employed people.) If a low level manufacturing employee of two years moves on, how disruptive is that? I imagine you have a lot of applications on file. How much time do you lose to training? What's the max increase per hour (if any) you would give to avoid that?

                      Is it only wage pressure when it happens at a high enough frequency?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Why Wages Lag

                        Originally posted by LazyBoy View Post
                        I'm curious. (I've never employed people.) If a low level manufacturing employee of two years moves on, how disruptive is that? I imagine you have a lot of applications on file. How much time do you lose to training? What's the max increase per hour (if any) you would give to avoid that?

                        Is it only wage pressure when it happens at a high enough frequency?
                        Actually, we attempt to manage what we consider to be a healthy balance. We want some "unskilled" laborers that have experience. Our "core group" if you will that is spread out strategically by department/skill set. Some have been with us for over 25 years (in a 40 year old company). Then we balance that with a group that turns-over regularly. Since this group is "unskilled" the training investment is minimal and the duration is short. Keeping this group turning over keeps our labor costs lower over time than if we kept every employee for the long term. It also brings in fresh personalities and ideas/questions which help us on occasion. In my opinion, "experience" in an unskilled job is overrated. If I had to choose one extreme or the other, I'd choose a workforce that turns over 100% every year over one that never turns over as I believe the cost of training to be far less than the cost of increasing & compounding wages and benefits.
                        "...the western financial system has already failed. The failure has just not yet been realized, while the system remains confident that it is still alive." Jesse

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Why Wages Lag

                          Thanks rjwJr. Those are fascinating insights.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Why Wages Lag

                            Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
                            Thanks rjwJr. Those are fascinating insights.
                            Thanks, but I'm not proud of it, I simply recognize and deal with it.

                            In a perfect utopia, I would keep everybody employed forever and provide them maximum pay and benefits.

                            In a competitive marketplace, I need to be smart in keeping my costs below my competitors so I can provide better value to potential customers.
                            "...the western financial system has already failed. The failure has just not yet been realized, while the system remains confident that it is still alive." Jesse

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Why Wages Lag

                              Originally posted by rjwjr View Post
                              Thanks, but I'm not proud of it, I simply recognize and deal with it.

                              In a perfect utopia, I would keep everybody employed forever and provide them maximum pay and benefits.

                              In a competitive marketplace, I need to be smart in keeping my costs below my competitors so I can provide better value to potential customers.
                              Sorry to come off short and critical
                              i have owned a small manufacturing company and helped run a couple others and see exactly what you mean.

                              i've never explicitly discussed the trade off betwween turnover costs and higher pay, though I have spent countless hours planning and arranging plant operations so the least skilled, lowest cost person could step right in and produce a good product. Any honest manufacturing professional must admit that driving down costs is a huge goal, and that includes wages.

                              Comment

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