US Wage Growth Is Starting Fade Due To Inflation Says Labor Department Report

US Wage Growth Is Starting Fade Due To Inflation Says Labor Department Report
Applicants are walked through their job offer by General Motors employees during a job fair in Spring Hill, Tenn., on Nov. 16, 2021. (Brett Carlsen/Getty Images)

Americans have seen their wages increase as pandemic restrictions have eased over the past year, which have continued into April but not kept up with the rising rate of inflation, according to the latest employment data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released on May 6.

Employee salaries have been on the rise for the past year, as employers struggled to retain and hire new staff as millions of American workers sought out jobs with higher wages.

Wage growth in nominal terms is by some measures stronger than has been seen in many decades.

The average U.S. employee made $31.85 an hour in April, said the report, which is an increase from the same time last year when the average was at $30.20 an hour, a 5.5 percent increase.

Wage increases grew in April, slightly slower than expected, after economists estimated that average wages would grow by 0.4 percent that month, but instead only witnessed a $0.10 rise from March, a 0.3 percent increase.

“Maybe the most important data set: US Average Hourly Earnings (M/M) Apr: 0.3% (est 0.4%; prev 0.4%; prevR 0.5%),” tweeted Sven Henrich, founder and lead market strategist for Northman Trader, referring to the April slowdown in worker’s earnings.

Wage increases are beginning to come head to head with soaring inflation, which is chipping away at paychecks.

Analysts are uncertain if or when inflation rates will go down.

Prices have been rising since last year, with inflation reaching a 41-year high in March of this year, due to supply chain issues, pandemic variants, and a war in Ukraine.

For twelve months from March 2021 to March 2022, consumer prices rose by 8.5 percent, several percentage points higher than the 5.6 percent in wage growth over the same period.

The actual rise in the cost of living is thought to be much higher when taking into account food and transportation prices.

With annual inflation increasing at its fastest pace since 1982, the rising cost of living is even forcing some retirees back into the workforce.

Over half of Americans who quit in 2021 are currently working and making more than they did at their old jobs, according to a survey from the Pew Research Center.

Wage expectations for job seekers in April remained high, with the number of workers expecting higher wages growing by 43 percent over the past year according to Glassdoor.

The job site said that on average, job seekers are expecting to make 34 percent, or $9,253 more than their current salary at their new employers, which actually exceeds current the growth rate in earnings.

Most sectors have seen their average hourly earnings increase from March through April this year, led by mining and logging, with an increase of 1.12 percent, but retail and utilities saw a decline in wages over the same period.

Despite the decline, these wages in retail and utilities are still higher than they were a year ago.

U.S. job growth has moderated to a slightly brisker pace, with the April unemployment rate at 3.6 percent and non-farm gains in employment at 428,000, according to recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

There were 11.5 million job openings at the beginning of April, widening the jobs to workers gap by a record 3.4 percent of the labor force from 3.1 percent in February.

The sluggish growth in average hourly earnings in April lowered the year-on-year increase from 5.6 percent in March, while the average workweek remains the same this month at 34.6 hours.

“Following a very strong increase in employment costs in the first quarter, evidence of upward pressures on wages continuing into the second quarter would keep risks tilted towards a more hawkish Fed,” said Veronica Clark, an economist at Citigroup in New York.

Though U.S. economic growth numbers remain positive, the GDP contracted 1.4 percent in the first quarter under the weight of a record trade deficit, highlighting the Federal Reserve’s need to curb inflation.

The Fed raised its policy interest rate by 50 basis points on May 4, in the biggest hike in 22 years, and said that it would begin trimming its bond holdings in June.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell on May 4 said, that a 75-basis-point rate hike was not on the table, but some economists believe that the central bank could still raise its benchmark interest rate above its estimated neutral rate of between 2 and 3 percent.

However, there is still concern that the Fed would raise rates too high and choke off economic growth.

Though exports took a hit in the first quarter due to the trade deficit, domestic demand consumption remains strong, with consumer spending and investment in business equipment continuing to make gains.

Reuters has contributed to this report.

From The Epoch Times

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