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MisterOpus1
Grumpy Old Fart



Registered: Dec 2001
Location: Kansas City
Wages lagging behind inflation

I'm surprised no one has brought this up yet:

quote:

Wages Lagging Behind Prices
Inflation has outpaced the rise in salaries for the first time in 14 years. And workers are paying a bigger share of the cost of their healthcare.
By Nicholas Riccardi
Times Staff Writer

April 11, 2005

For the first time in 14 years, the American workforce has in effect gotten an across-the-board pay cut.

The growth in wages in 2004 and the first two months of this year trailed inflation, compounding the squeeze from higher housing, energy and other costs.

The result is that people like Victor Romero are finding themselves falling behind.

The 49-year-old film-set laborer had to ditch his $1,100-a-month Hollywood apartment because his rent kept rising while his pay of $24.50 an hour stayed flat.

"There's no such thing as raises anymore," Romero said.

This is the first time that salaries have increased more slowly than prices since the 1990-91 recession. Though salary growth has been relatively sluggish since the 2001 downturn, inflation also had stayed relatively subdued until last year, when the consumer price index rose 2.7%. But wages rose only 2.5%.

The effective 0.2-percentage-point erosion in workers' living standards occurred while the economy expanded at a healthy 4%, better than the 3% historical average.

Meanwhile, corporate profits hit record highs as companies got more productivity out of workers while keeping pay increases down.

Some see climbing profits and stagnant wages as not only unfair but also ultimately unsustainable. "Those that are baking the larger pie ought to see their slices expanding," said Jared Bernstein, an economist with the liberal Economic Policy Institute in Washington.

But higher wages could hurt the economy by stoking inflation further. Employers might pass the costs on to consumers in higher prices, and that in turn might prompt the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates more aggressively, possibly slowing the recovery or even triggering a recession.

For now, workers' wallets are being pummeled by something of a perfect storm of economic forces: a weak job market, rising health insurance premiums and other inflationary pressures.

The biggest factor is the slack employment market, which means there is little pressure on businesses to boost pay. "They take advantage of you because there's no work and anyone will work for anything," Romero said.

Although the unemployment rate has dropped to a relatively low 5.2%, that figure doesn't count the hundreds of thousands of jobless people who've given up their searches and dropped out of the labor market at a greater rate than anytime since 1988. At the same time, the cost of health premiums has skyrocketed, eating into the pool of corporate cash set aside for raises. Although pay rose only about 2.4% last year, benefit costs jumped almost 7%.

With benefits factored in, workers' total compensation did outpace inflation in 2004, even if they didn't see it in their paychecks. But employers also are requiring workers to pay a greater share of their premiums.

"Healthcare has eroded the wage base," said Janemarie Mulvey, chief economist with the Employment Policy Foundation, a business-funded think tank in Washington.

"In the long run, we can't continue like this. If healthcare keeps crowding out wages forever, something's got to give."

The squeeze is especially intense on the 47% of the workforce whose employers don't directly provide their health insurance. For lower-income workers, who are more likely to be uninsured, the falling value of their wages is even more serious because they're more likely to live paycheck to paycheck. And rising food and energy prices take a proportionately higher toll on the poor than on the rich.

Historically, periods when wage growth is outpaced by inflation rarely last more than 18 months. That's partly because businesses don't want their employees' living standards to fall, as that injures morale, said Trewman Bewley, a Yale University economist who has studied wage activity during economic downturns.

Many economists figure it's only a matter of time until workers can pry more money out of their employers to catch up to inflation again. If economic growth remains robust, as many forecasters predict, workers may gain greater leverage to negotiate wage hikes.

"Chances are that those workers that have problems getting by because of higher fuel prices will probably tell their employers, 'I can't make it,' " said John Lonski, chief economist at Moody's Investors Service.

That hasn't played out for Brian Chartier. The 29-year-old Glendale resident handles inventory for a Los Angeles manufacturing company. No one there, he said, has gotten a raise in two years.

"They're able to do this and I haven't quit, because where am I going to go?" he said. "There are no jobs."

While his salary remained flat, rising healthcare premiums kept eating up more and more of Chartier's take-home pay, so he dropped out of his employer's insurance program. His rent is also climbing.

As Chartier loaded bags of groceries into his Honda Civic last week, he boasted that they were full of bargains. "I don't get a single thing that's not on sale," Chartier said. "I can't afford to anymore."

Despite the failure of their wages to keep pace with inflation, American consumers have kept shopping. Consumer spending has continued to rise. Analysts say that's partly because some shoppers are thinking less about their paychecks and more about their biggest asset: their homes.

Home prices rose 21.1% in Southern California and 9% nationwide from February 2004 to February 2005, sheltering consumers, and the economy, from much of the pinch of higher prices.

"There's been a wealth effect afoot throughout much of the recession and the recovery," said Bernstein of the Economic Policy Institute, "because no matter what people's incomes were doing, their wealth was improving — their biggest assets, their homes, were accruing."

As inflation sparks higher interest rates, most economists expect the housing market to cool, making shoppers more dependent on their paychecks. And even those who have seen their paper wealth rise phenomenally aren't happy about rising costs and stagnant pay.

Corina Swatz has seen the value of her Silver Lake home triple in about a decade. But neither she nor her husband has gotten a raise in more than a year. Meanwhile, gas prices have forced them to shell out $55 to fill the tank of their Chevy Tahoe.

"I used to spend $600 a month [on groceries]. Now I spend $800," Swatz, a mother of two, said as she made her weekly Costco run last week. The increased value of her home gives her only so much solace. "We're hanging in there."

The danger is that people like Swatz, despite their home equity cushion, may pull the rug out from under the economic expansion by reining in their spending.

That's what Gabriel Torres has done. The 56-year-old cook, who lives in Hollywood, hasn't gotten a raise in years but pays ever-higher prices to fill his Nissan Xterra. He and his wife have come up with a solution: Cut down on driving.

"We don't go out much," Torres said. "We used to. But now we only drive when we really have to."

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-...-home-headlines


Thoughts? Just a bump in the road, or a taste of things to come? Should we really be surprised by this?


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Old Post Apr-15-2005 17:11  United States
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Shakka
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Feb 2003
Location:
Re: Wages lagging behind inflation

quote:
Originally posted by MisterOpus1
I'm surprised no one has brought this up yet:



Thoughts? Just a bump in the road, or a taste of things to come? Should we really be surprised by this?


Fucking oil prices are a huge part of current inflationary trends.

Old Post Apr-15-2005 17:30  United States
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Dupz
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Dec 2002
Location: Melbourne

perhaps we're on the verge of another bout of stagflation....?


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-Voltaire

Old Post Apr-18-2005 14:33  Australia
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St_Andrew
I <3 NYC



Registered: May 2003
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
Re: Re: Wages lagging behind inflation

quote:
Originally posted by Shakka
Fucking oil prices are a huge part of current inflationary trends.


Inflation is still not very high tho...

Old Post Apr-18-2005 14:42  Europe
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Shakka
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Feb 2003
Location:
Re: Re: Re: Wages lagging behind inflation

quote:
Originally posted by St_Andrew
Inflation is still not very high tho...


Import Price Index was up over 7% vs. a year ago. That's a pretty steep level. Energy is a huge component of that rise.

Old Post Apr-18-2005 14:47  United States
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Dupz
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Dec 2002
Location: Melbourne
Re: Re: Re: Re: Wages lagging behind inflation

quote:
Originally posted by Shakka
Import Price Index was up over 7% vs. a year ago. That's a pretty steep level. Energy is a huge component of that rise.


7%, you serious? even with Chinese imports pushing down the prices of labour-intensive goods we consume...? I know that in Australia we have the Chinese, and only the Chinese, to thank for us keeping our inflation in check.


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Old Post Apr-18-2005 15:35  Australia
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Shakka
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Feb 2003
Location:
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Wages lagging behind inflation

quote:
Originally posted by Dupz
7%, you serious? even with Chinese imports pushing down the prices of labour-intensive goods we consume...? I know that in Australia we have the Chinese, and only the Chinese, to thank for us keeping our inflation in check.


This is a bit long and boring, but provides some commentary on the trend. Granted, one data-point does not a trend make, but it's certainly worth paying attention to. Give 4% of that number to oil alone.

quote:
By Joe Richter
April 15 (Bloomberg) -- Prices of goods imported into the
U.S. increased last month by the most since January 2003, paced
by higher costs for crude oil, building materials and other
industrial supplies, government figures showed.
The 1.8 percent rise followed a 0.8 percent increase in
February, the Labor Department said today in Washington.
Excluding petroleum, prices rose 0.3 percent. Imported industrial
supplies prices excluding energy were up 1.1 percent in March,
the biggest rise in four months.
Federal Reserve policy makers are forecast to raise interest
rates to keep those costs from becoming more widespread,
economists said. Prices of consumer goods from overseas were up
just 1 percent in the last year, suggesting competition is
helping keep companies from passing along higher raw materials
costs.
``The specter of inflation, the inflation genie, is still
pretty well under control,'' U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow
said in an interview. ``The Fed is clearly conscious of the need
to be on the alert for inflationary forces, and to lean against
them. The overall environment though, as the FOMC indicated, is
still quite benign on the inflation front.''
Imported capital goods prices declined for a second month,
automobile costs were unchanged from February and consumer goods
fell for the first time since August, the Labor report showed.
The rise in overall import prices was the biggest since a
1.8 percent increase in January 2003. Economists forecast a 1.4
percent rise in the index, based on the median estimate in
Bloomberg News survey. All expected increases, ranging from 0.3
percent to 2.2 percent.

Year Over Year

The costs of all imported goods last month were 7.1 percent
greater than in March 2004. Excluding petroleum, they were up 2.9
percent
from the same month last year, compared with a 2.8
percent gain in the 12 months that ended in February.

Prices of imported petroleum surged 10.6 percent last month,
after rising 4.6 percent in February. Compared with a year
earlier, the price was up 36 percent.
At their March 22 meeting, Fed policy makers said inflation
risks were ``now tilted a little to the upside.'' Central bankers
last month raised their target rate for overnight bank lending a
quarter point to 2.75 percent.
Imported food prices rose 3.4 percent after rising 1 percent
the month before.
Prices for imported consumer goods other than automobiles
fell 0.4 percent after rising 0.5 percent the prior month.

Business Equipment

The cost of imported capital equipment dropped 0.1 percent
for a second month in March. Compared with the same month last
year, capital-goods prices were down 0.9 percent.
Apparel prices declined 0.3 percent in March after falling
0.1 percent. The end of worldwide quotas on textiles Jan. 1 gave
a boost to cheaper fabric imports from China. Textile shipments
from China rose almost 10 percent in February, according to the
latest trade data.
The price of goods imported from China fell 0.1 percent, and
was down 0.6 percent over the past year. Goods from Japan were
unchanged, and those from the European Union rose 0.2 percent.
Canadian goods prices rose 2 percent.
Prices of U.S. products exported to other countries rose 0.7
percent in March after no change in February.
Prices for agricultural exports increased 3.7 percent while
costs for non-agricultural exports rose 0.4 percent.

Energy

Oil futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange averaged
$54.63 a barrel last month, up from $48.05 in February. Oil
futures fell to less than $50 a barrel this week. Prices of other
commodities such as copper have also risen.
``We are seeing these prices kind of peak here during
2005,'' said Alexander Cutler, chief executive of Cleveland-based
Eaton Corp., in an interview yesterday. ``We don't think they're
going down substantially though. As long as worldwide demand is
this high we think you'll see these prices of oil and many of
these metal-based commodities continue to be fairly high. Those
are being passed through the economy and it's part of the reason
inflation is up.''
Eaton is the world's second-largest maker of hydraulic
equipment. Parker Hannifin Corp., also based in Cleveland, is the
world's largest maker of hydraulic equipment.
Anhui Tongdu Copper Stock Co., China's second-largest copper
producer by output, said this week that first-quarter profit rose
68 percent on higher prices. Copper futures have risen 19 percent
this year in Shanghai, driven by a global shortage and rising
Chinese demand.

Consumer Demand

Signs of waning consumer demand in the U.S. and excess
supply of some goods worldwide may help limit the extent to which
businesses can pass higher supply costs on to consumers.
U.S. retail sales rose by less than forecast in March,
suggesting higher gasoline prices are prompting consumers to
spend less on other goods.
Expansion in the $35 billion liquid crystal displays
industry has led to an oversupply that drove first-quarter prices
down 41 percent from a year earlier. Seoul-based LG. Philips LCD
Co., the world's second-largest maker of liquid crystal displays,
had its first quarterly loss in two years after an industry glut.
The dollar rose 1.4 percent this year through the end of
March against a basket of currencies of U.S. trading partners. It
fell 4.6 percent in 2004 and is down 8.9 percent since March
2002. A stronger dollar makes foreign goods cheaper for U.S.
companies and consumers.

Fed

Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas and a former U.S. trade official, said in an April 13
conference call that ``the economy looks to be in fairly good
shape.''
``There's always going to be concern at the Federal Reserve
that we don't let inflation raise its hideous head,'' Fisher
said. ``But presently, it looks like it is well contained.''
The import price report is the first of three measures of
inflation for the month of March. Wholesale prices, due April 19,
are forecast to rise 0.6 percent, and 0.2 percent when food and
energy are excluded, based on the median estimates in a Bloomberg
survey. March consumer prices probably increased 0.4 percent, a
separate survey showed.
The government's import price statistics aren't seasonally
adjusted, meaning there is typically little correlation between
those and producer and consumer prices.

Old Post Apr-18-2005 16:25  United States
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