Why wages are finally picking up. And will it last?

why is it socialists have no understanding of basic economics -just "income inequality?"

There isn't going to be a bailout,because this isn't a bubble. it's REAL growth in all sectors not speculative growth

Sure, let's watch, I got time. It is a bubble, fictitious capital from financial sector chicanery. We'll be bailing out the aristocracy again with socialism. That's where america's staunchest "free marketeers" run when they tank the economic system, to socialism for themselves.
 
Sure, let's watch, I got time. It is a bubble, fictitious capital from financial sector chicanery. We'll be bailing out the aristocracy again with socialism. That's where america's staunchest "free marketeers" run when they tank the economic system, to socialism for themselves.
blah blah blah..you are just running unfounded rhetoric, when the GDP growth is real..

like I said about socialists -they really don't have a clue about how the economy actually works
 
blah blah blah..you are just running unfounded rhetoric, when the GDP growth is real..

like I said about socialists -they really don't have a clue about how the economy actually works

Hon, your Wall/Street/donor/"job creator" class demanded socialism and got it from "both" parties, the entire world witnessed it. They got bailed out via socialism on the backs of the people. America's relationship with socialism is that it is only good for the aristocracy, not the rabble. Socialism builds the cathedral stadiums of the pro sports team owners you want everyone to stand for your little anthem in. Your aristocracy is socialist.
 
Hon, your Wall/Street/donor/"job creator" class demanded socialism and got it from "both" parties, the entire world witnessed it. They got bailed out via socialism on the backs of the people. America's relationship with socialism is that it is only good for the aristocracy, not the rabble. Socialism builds the cathedral stadiums of the pro sports team owners you want everyone to stand for your little anthem in. Your aristocracy is socialist.
taxes =socialism? .
I seem to be ragging on you today, but you simply have no understand that this is real growth.not a bubble.
But if you want to keep you mind in a bubble and not see it - fine by me
 
why is it socialists have no understanding of basic economics -just "income inequality?"

There isn't going to be a bailout,because this isn't a bubble. it's REAL growth in all sectors not speculative growth

Why is it you don't understand the danger of wealth inequality?

As to the rest of your putrid post, suggest you read Reich's latest commentary.

Your version is farfetched at best.
 
why is it socialists have no understanding of basic economics -just "income inequality?"

There isn't going to be a bailout,because this isn't a bubble. it's REAL growth in all sectors not speculative growth

there is a bubble its just not where they think it is. I think we will have real trouble with credit card and student loans soon. Its good that wages are rising under Trump and he reduced the tax liability of the middle class but wages have to go up faster.
 
taxes =socialism? .
I seem to be ragging on you today, but you simply have no understand that this is real growth.not a bubble.
But if you want to keep you mind in a bubble and not see it - fine by me

You supported the TARP?
Over 90% of Americans were opposed to using their money to bail out Wall Street.....now you want to play the fool?

Well fuck you, fool.
 
there is a bubble its just not where they think it is. I think we will have real trouble with credit card and student loans soon. Its good that wages are rising under Trump and he reduced the tax liability of the middle class but wages have to go up faster.

Children say the damnedest things...

Too bad you blew your credibility with your incessant childish trolling.

Yup.
Households have been surviving by incurring debt.
Soon it will be time to pay the piper and anatta's pipedream will go up in smoke.
 
he long-awaited pickup in U.S. wage growth may have finally arrived.

Average hourly earnings rose 2.9 percent in August from a year earlier, the sharpest jump since June 2009, the Labor Department said Friday.

The rise last month means worker pay is finally increasing at a noticeably higher pace than the 2.3 percent yearly inflation measure tracked by the Federal Reserve. And that gives households a little more breathing room in their monthly budgets
.

Until now, pay increases have accelerated, but gradually. They’ve averaged about 2.7 percent in 2018, up from 2.5 percent the prior two years.

Economists have expected yearly pay increases to hit 3 percent since unemployment dipped below 5 percent in 2016 as more employers began struggling to find workers.

Workers looking for a bump in pay shouldn't break out the champagne just yet. Experts aren't sure whether the rise last month will continue.

Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, says “it is too early to assume a clear trend,” noting annual pay increases reached 2.8 percent in July 2016 only to fall back.

But Andrew Chamberlain, chief economist of Glassdoor, the giant job posting and employee review site, says: “I definitely don’t think it’s a blip. The signs are clear … you’re seeing a steady buildup of wage pressures.”

Though fatter paychecks are generally a positive for workers, they also could prod the Fed to raise interest rates more rapidly to head off a spike in inflation. That could make adjustable-rate mortgages and credit card debt more expensive and cool off the stock market along with workers’ 401(k) plan holdings. Higher rates make less risky bonds relatively more appealing than stocks.


One factor that has curtailed salary increases in Labor’s monthly jobs report is that highly paid baby boomers are retiring while lower-wage millennials are entering the labor market.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, which tracks the same workers over time, reported a 3.3 percent annual gain in wage growth in July, Chamberlain notes.

Now, Labor’s more closely watched report is also starting to reflect bigger advances in pay as the job market has tightened substantially in recent months. The number of job openings in June, at 6.7 million, outpaced the 6.6 million unemployed Americans, Labor Department figures show. Employers increasingly “are starting to pull talent away from the competition,” Chamberlain says.

Job switchers, in fact, are seeing the biggest benefits, with annual wage gains of 3.8 percent in July, compared to 2.9 percent for job holders, Chamberlain says, citing the Atlanta Fed figures.

Paychecks are increasing more sharply in some industries than others.

It’s no surprise that August pay was up 4.7 percent from a year ago among financial firms, 3 percent in professional and business services, and 3.4 percent in information. The latter category includes media and telecommunications companies, film studios and some tech workers. Construction, grappling with a severe worker shortage, boosted paychecks 3.3 percent.

Yet wages were also up 3.2 percent in leisure and hospitality
, which includes lower paid restaurant and hotel workers, and retail. Workers in those sectors are less inclined to move for jobs, forcing employers to draw from a more limited pool and bid up to attract them, Chamberlain says. Those employees also have benefited from minimum-wage increases in 18 states this year, he says.

Yet manufacturing, which has been struggling to hire high-skilled workers, doled out yearly pay increases averaging just 1.8 percent. Baker says many manufacturers may not be adept at poaching workers from rivals after having their pick of workers for years as factories closed and jobs moved overseas.

There was other good news for workers last month. Hiring rebounded in August, the government reported Friday, as employers added 201,000 jobs and the labor market continued to defy worker shortages and U.S. trade battles.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2018/09/07/wages-why-growth-hit-2-9-percent-august/1222884002/

The federal minimum wage is still $7.25 an hour?!!:whoa: I would not get out of bed for $7.25 an hour!
So why do we still a subhuman minimum wage, if wages are picking up?!!

130594_600.jpg




 
You supported the TARP?
Over 90% of Americans were opposed to using their money to bail out Wall Street.....now you want to play the fool?

Well fuck you, fool.
TARP saved the auto industry. GM and Crysler were going under.
I hate bank bailouts -faied banks would have made the recession worse.

None of this is in topic that wages are finally getting workers more money -averaging 3% now.
 
Children say the damnedest things...

Too bad you blew your credibility with your incessant childish trolling.

Yup.
Households have been surviving by incurring debt.
Soon it will be time to pay the piper and anatta's pipedream will go up in smoke.

aww i think thats the first nice thing you said to me. Love Trumps Hate indeed <3.

Also the credit thing and student loan thing happened under our black president too but he did nothing.
 
TARP saved the auto industry. GM and Crysler were going under.
I hate bank bailouts -faied banks would have made the recession worse.

None of this is in topic that wages are finally getting workers more money -averaging 3% now.

Almost .6 percent more than inflation ....after 35 years of nothing...let me know when we get back to the pre-Reagan buying power.
 
there is a bubble its just not where they think it is. I think we will have real trouble with credit card and student loans soon. Its good that wages are rising under Trump and he reduced the tax liability of the middle class but wages have to go up faster.
They are finally going up after stagnating under Obama.
Some sectors are doing really well,but just as important is the job growth of good paying jobs.

Debt is a bitch. the only way out is to earn more for most non-stock holding workers.
 
They are finally going up after stagnating under Obama.
Some sectors are doing really well,but just as important is the job growth of good paying jobs.

Debt is a bitch. the only way out is to earn more for most non-stock holding workers.

yup. the trump haters are wrong in saying that his policies caused a bubble. It was already there. If anything Trump is delaying the popping with what he is doing which is good.
 
aww i think thats the first nice thing you said to me. Love Trumps Hate indeed <3.

Also the credit thing and student loan thing happened under our black president too but he did nothing.

History will record that Obama did an amazing job...not nothing.
 
Almost .6 percent more than inflation ....after 35 years of nothing...let me know when we get back to the pre-Reagan buying power.
more than that in some sectors. also good paying jobs.
you want to go back to before the oil crisis? First thing you need to do is kick China out of the WTO.
Absent that happening re-negotiating trade -which is what Trump is doing -and growing GDP (which Trump is doing)
 
yup. the trump haters are wrong in saying that his policies caused a bubble. It was already there. If anything Trump is delaying the popping with what he is doing which is good.
all one can do is increase earnings -yes -assuming you are not living like a credit kard king
 
he long-awaited pickup in U.S. wage growth may have finally arrived.

Average hourly earnings rose 2.9 percent in August from a year earlier, the sharpest jump since June 2009, the Labor Department said Friday.

The rise last month means worker pay is finally increasing at a noticeably higher pace than the 2.3 percent yearly inflation measure tracked by the Federal Reserve. And that gives households a little more breathing room in their monthly budgets
.

Until now, pay increases have accelerated, but gradually. They’ve averaged about 2.7 percent in 2018, up from 2.5 percent the prior two years.

Economists have expected yearly pay increases to hit 3 percent since unemployment dipped below 5 percent in 2016 as more employers began struggling to find workers.

Workers looking for a bump in pay shouldn't break out the champagne just yet. Experts aren't sure whether the rise last month will continue.

Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, says “it is too early to assume a clear trend,” noting annual pay increases reached 2.8 percent in July 2016 only to fall back.

But Andrew Chamberlain, chief economist of Glassdoor, the giant job posting and employee review site, says: “I definitely don’t think it’s a blip. The signs are clear … you’re seeing a steady buildup of wage pressures.”

Though fatter paychecks are generally a positive for workers, they also could prod the Fed to raise interest rates more rapidly to head off a spike in inflation. That could make adjustable-rate mortgages and credit card debt more expensive and cool off the stock market along with workers’ 401(k) plan holdings. Higher rates make less risky bonds relatively more appealing than stocks.


One factor that has curtailed salary increases in Labor’s monthly jobs report is that highly paid baby boomers are retiring while lower-wage millennials are entering the labor market.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, which tracks the same workers over time, reported a 3.3 percent annual gain in wage growth in July, Chamberlain notes.

Now, Labor’s more closely watched report is also starting to reflect bigger advances in pay as the job market has tightened substantially in recent months. The number of job openings in June, at 6.7 million, outpaced the 6.6 million unemployed Americans, Labor Department figures show. Employers increasingly “are starting to pull talent away from the competition,” Chamberlain says.

Job switchers, in fact, are seeing the biggest benefits, with annual wage gains of 3.8 percent in July, compared to 2.9 percent for job holders, Chamberlain says, citing the Atlanta Fed figures.

Paychecks are increasing more sharply in some industries than others.

It’s no surprise that August pay was up 4.7 percent from a year ago among financial firms, 3 percent in professional and business services, and 3.4 percent in information. The latter category includes media and telecommunications companies, film studios and some tech workers. Construction, grappling with a severe worker shortage, boosted paychecks 3.3 percent.

Yet wages were also up 3.2 percent in leisure and hospitality
, which includes lower paid restaurant and hotel workers, and retail. Workers in those sectors are less inclined to move for jobs, forcing employers to draw from a more limited pool and bid up to attract them, Chamberlain says. Those employees also have benefited from minimum-wage increases in 18 states this year, he says.

Yet manufacturing, which has been struggling to hire high-skilled workers, doled out yearly pay increases averaging just 1.8 percent. Baker says many manufacturers may not be adept at poaching workers from rivals after having their pick of workers for years as factories closed and jobs moved overseas.

There was other good news for workers last month. Hiring rebounded in August, the government reported Friday, as employers added 201,000 jobs and the labor market continued to defy worker shortages and U.S. trade battles.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2018/09/07/wages-why-growth-hit-2-9-percent-august/1222884002/

As I pointed out to you in your other thread Wages have risen exactly as much as inflation has in the last year. Trump isn't burning up the economy. These are cost of living increases. When the census releases its report later this month, you will most likely see median household income slipped in 2017 if industry experts who follow these things are correct in their predictions.
 
Back
Top