The current economic expansion is
quite different for those of us that labor for wages.
Let's do a bit of background work on
the concept of labor share. The notion of labor share is how economists
measure the share of employee compensation as a percentage of the total gross
value added to the economy which is defined as:
Gross Value Added = Employee Compensation
+
Corporate Profits
+
Rental Income
+
Net Interest Income
+
Proprietors' Income
+
Net indirect taxes after subsidies
+
Depreciation
Every dollar of income must be
earned by production factors of either capital or labor or be taken by
government in the form of taxes. Of the above factors, only employee
compensation in its entirety is considered labor income. In addition, a
portion of proprietors' income is considered labor income; in the case of
self-employed workers/proprietors, it is assumed that they pay themselves the
same wage that they would otherwise earn in their respective sector of the
economy. To calculate labor share, the total labor compensation is then
divided by the total value added to the economy, deriving labor share as shown
here:
Labor Share = Labor Compensation
Value
Added
Now that we have that behind us, let's look at what has happened to labor's
share of the economy all the way back to the mid-1940s (setting 2009 as a value
of 100):
Between 1945 and 2001, other than
for a few years in the mid-1990s, labor's share of the non-farm business sector
was at or above a value of 105. After nearly every recession since the
middle of the 1940s, labor's share of the economy dropped and then began a
gradual rise back to its pre-recession levels. This began to change after
the 2001 recession as labor's share fell gradually to a value of around 101.
Once the Great Recession took hold in 2008, labor's share of the economy
fell very rapidly to a low of 96.24 in the third quarter of 2011. Since
then, labor's share has not improved by much, rising to only 96.95 in the
second quarter of 2013. As you can see from the graph, labor's share of
the economy is now just above its 70 year low.
Now, let's look at labor's share of
the economy in a slightly different way. Here is a graph from FRED showing the
percentage of GDP that is derived from employee wages and salaries:
That's a pretty convincing downward
slope, isn't it? At its peak in 1969, wages and salaries made up 51.55
percent of GDP. Since then, save for a few short years during the second
Clinton Administration, wages and salaries have made up a decreasing portion of
GDP, falling to an annual low of 42.1 percent in 2011. Admittedly, the
share did rise in 2012 to 43.1 percent, however, this is still the fourth
lowest value on record.
Now, let's look at another part of
the value added equation; corporate profit's share of the economy:
In sharp contrast to the labor share of GDP and other than the drop during the Great Recession, that's a pretty convincing upward slope since 2001, isn't it? Looking all the way back to the
mid-1940s, after tax corporate profits as a fraction of GDP have never been
higher than they are now. In fact, at their current level of 10.9
percent, corporate profits comprise over 1 percentage point more of the total
economy than their previous record of 9.8 percent set back in the third quarter
of 1950. At their low point during the depths of the Great Recession when
after tax corporate profits dropped to a measly 4.6 percent of GDP, the
contribution of corporate profits has risen by a staggering 6.4 percentage
points or 139 percent.
Lastly, let's look at what has
happened to real compensation per hour for the entire
business sector, setting the year 2009 as a value of 100:
Basically, since the beginning of
2007, after the effects of inflation are removed, hourly compensation for all
businesses in the United States has been stagnant. That's nearly 7 years
of no movement in wages at the same time that corporate profits made up a
bigger portion of the economy.
It is quite obvious that this recovery
is not evenly distributed through the American economy. Corporations are
benefitting on the backs of their workers who, as shown on this last graph, are putting out more than ever
before:
Apparently, labor's lost share of the economy is the corporate world's gain.
Very interesting but also perplexing. I feel it was commonly accepted that the average worker was under assault but the corporate profit chart is harder to explain, margins should be falling in a weak economy. This suggest lower interest rates and borrowing cost may be a big factor when coupled with reducing employees.
ReplyDeleteI think you're overlooking the fact that corporations are still outsourcing to cheap overseas labor markets. The net effect is their profits remain high at a time when middle class America (or what's left of it) stays underemployed. In essence "American" corporations have abandoned US workers.
DeleteThe only reason some of them still have their HQs here is because the US government is the only government stupid enough to let them get away with paying zero or near zero federal income tax while doing nothing to prevent them from sending US jobs overseas.
Yes, but a theory of the shifts from labour to capital blaming it all on non-financial corporations doesn't wash. Wages and salaries, like you say, began to decline as a share of GDP in the late Sixties. Corporate profits, meanwhile, actually bottomed out as a share of GDP in Reagan's salad days, recovering in the Nineties.
ReplyDeleteWhat's happened to the other portions of income?