As just about everyone is
aware, wage inequality in the United States has been rising since the 1970s.
According to a recent analysis by Lawrence Mishel, John
Schmitt and Heidi Shierholz connects the widening gap between the top floor
corner office dwellers and the rest of us to an array of economic policies that
I will cover in this posting.
Here is what the authors
observed about wage inequality, looking at four points in the overall
distribution; the 10th percentile (the bottom 10 percent of earners), the 50th
percentile (the median or the midpoint of all earners), the 90th percentile
(the top 10 percent of earners) and the 99th percentile (the 1 percent):
1.) Between 1979 and the
mid-1980s, the wage gap between the 10th percentile and the median grew
strongly, however, starting in the late 1980s, wages at the bottom began to
catch up to the wages in the middle. Since the 1990s, the wage gap
between the bottom and the median have remained steady.
2.) Since 1979, the
distance between the wages at the top and the middle began to diverge. In
1979, a worker in the 90th percentile earned 1.95 times what a median worker
earned. By 2013, this had grown to 2.42 times. This is in contrast
to the wage gap between the 10th percentile and the median which only grew
until the mid-1980s.
3.) Over the past decade,
the wage difference between the 90th percentile and the median expanded,
however, the wages of college-educated workers grew only slightly faster than
the wages of the non-college educated worker. In other words, after 1995,
the wage premium paid to college graduates grew at a slower rate than it did
between 1979 and 1995.
4.) Between 1979 and
2007, the inflation-adjusted annual wages of the top one percent of earners
rose by 156 percent, and by 362 percent for the top 0.1 percent. This
compares to 34.1 percent for wage earners in the 90th to 95th percentile and
only a 17 percent average for all workers in the bottom 90 percent of earners.
Let's look at the
author's explanations for their observations.
1.) The Wage Gap
Between the Bottom and the Middle: As I noted, the gap between these
groups grew between 1979 and 1990 for one key reason; there was no action by
Congress to raise the federal minimum wage during the period from 1981 until
1990 as shown on this chart:
This means that during
the decade, the purchasing power of the minimum wage declined by about 30
percent. An analysis shows that, in the case of the female workforce,
roughly two-thirds of the growth in the wage gap between the 10th percentile
and the median between 1979 and 2009 can be explained by trends in the minimum
wage. The reason that the wage gap between the bottom and the middle has
remained relatively steady since the 1990s is the fact that the minimum wage
grew in real terms by 14.6 percent between 1989 and 2000 and by a further 7.8
percent between 2000 and 2011. The increases in the minimum wage from
$3.80 in 1990 to $7.25 in 2009 kept the gap between the bottom 10 percent and
the middle of the earning pack relatively consistent.
2.) The Wage Gap
Between the Middle and the Top: The long expansion of the wage gap
between the middle and top earners stems from several policies; deunionization,
foreign trade policies, higher levels of unemployment as a result of monetary
and political policies and industrial deregulation. All of these factors
have had a strong negative impact on middle income wages.
Here is a graph showing the decline in union
membership from 1930 to 2003:
The long decline in the
power of unions has impacted middle income earners the most; this factor
explains three-quarters of the expanding wage gap between those who are high
school graduates and those who have college degrees over the years between 1978
and 2011. Overall, deunionization can explain one-third of the growing
wage inequality for men and one-fifth for women.
Another factor that has
impacted the wage gap between workers with a college education and those
without has been the downward pressure on the wages of non-college educated
workers by increased trade with less developed nations, particularly
China, as production has moved to offshore locations As we can see on this graph, growth in the wages paid to middle
income manufacturing workers since 1980 has been far lower than in the period from the late 1960s to the early 1980s and is now at its lowest level in two generations:
As well, wage growth at
the middle have been pushed down by higher levels of unemployment over
much of the last 40 years which can be attributed to two factors; the monetary
policies of the Federal Reserve during the 1980s that increased the level of
unemployment during the high interest rate period and the failure of governments
to stimulate the economy through spending during recessions. In the case
of the Fed, its monetary policies are deliberately crafted to keep unemployment
just high enough that there is no upward pressure on wages since higher wages
push that dreaded inflation upwards and we all know how much central bankers hate inflation.
Industrial deregulation (i.e. airlines,
inter-state busing, utilities) has also had a strong negative impact on wages for
blue collar, middle income earners. Between 1979 and 1988, about 7
percent of the rise in male wage inequality can be attributed to deregulation in various industries.
3.) The Wage Gap
Between the Top One Percent and the Rest: Most of the increase in
wage inequality has taken place between the top one percent and the bottom 99
percent. This is a result of two factors; the massive growth in the
compensation of CEOs and the expansion of the very well-paying financial
services sector. Executives/managers and the financial sector accounted
for 58 percent of the growth in the income share of the top one percent and 67
percent of the growth in the income share of the top 0.1 percent. While
we generally compare the wages of CEOs to their worker drones, it is
interesting to see the growth in CEO compensation compared to the earnings of
their 0.1 percent peers; in 1979, CEOs made 3.16 times what the top 0.1 percent
earned, by 2010, this had risen to 4.70 times. CEO earnings have become
so massive that they form a subset of their own, even among the top 0.1 percent
of all earners.
It is interesting to see
that certain deliberately implemented policies by governments, the Federal
Reserve and the corporate world have led to increasing wage inequality over the
past 40 years. Low and middle income earners have become increasingly
powerless in their attempts to gain higher wages, resulting in the obvious fact
that they are being left behind economically.
No comments:
Post a Comment