While net productivity has continued to increase by an expected 70%, hourly compensation in the country is less than a fifth of that at just 12%.
The growth in productivity has more than doubled that of hourly compensation for U.S. workers since 1948. With net productivity in the country growing by roughly 253 percent in the last seven decades, hourly compensation has increased by just 116 percent.
Between 1948-1979, the percent growth in productivity and wages were relatively similar, with an increase of 108 percent and 93 percent, respectively. The growth from 1979-2018, however, has been drastically different. While net productivity has continued to increase by an expected 70 percent, hourly compensation in the country is less than a fifth of that at just 12 percent.
Policy changes, deregulation and a rapid decline in unionization since 1978 has greatly contributed to the stagnation of wages in the country, according to the Economic Policy Institute. Differences in wages and productivity are felt even more in minority communities across the country, and COVID-19 is only speeding up this trend of inequality. Recovery efforts to reignite the U.S. economy could further perpetuate wage inequality or could serve as a catalyst to begin the long journey of undoing the damage caused over the last four decades and create a prosperous workforce.
Chosen excerpts by Job Market Monitor. Read the whole story @ Productivity in the US is soaring, but wages aren’t keeping up | World Economic Forum
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