Revisiting Wage Growth after the Recession
Author(s) -
Roberto Pinheiro,
Meifeng Yang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
economic commentary (federal reserve bank of cleveland)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2163-3738
pISSN - 0428-1276
DOI - 10.26509/frbc-ec-202002
Subject(s) - economics , productivity , wage growth , inflation (cosmology) , recession , wage , labour economics , efficiency wage , keynesian economics , macroeconomics , physics , theoretical physics
In this Commentary, we show that realized wage growth since 2015 has mostly been at a rate that would be expected given observed rates of inflation and labor productivity growth. Moreover, labor productivity growth has been in line with its potential over the same period. This picture of the post-recession recovery of wages is very different from the one we observed in an earlier analysis, when all we had were data up through the end of 2015. The reasons underlying the difference are large revisions in labor productivity data and upticks in the inflation rate and labor productivity growth since our last report.
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