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						Years into recovery and 
						with full employment, U.S. wages still lag 
						
		 
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		 [July 08, 2017] 
		By Ann Saphir 
		 
		SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The U.S. economy 
		is now a decade on from the start of the global financial crisis and at 
		what most economists view as full employment, yet when it comes to wage 
		rises, the answer seems to be forget about it. 
		 
		Government data on Friday showed that average hourly earnings in June 
		rose just 2.5 percent on the year and have slowed in the past two 
		quarters rather than accelerating even as workers become scarce due to 
		continued economic strength. 
		 
		The lack of wage growth is mirrored across the developed world, most of 
		which has staged a slower recovery than the United States. 
		 
		For decades, higher wages had been driven by gains in worker 
		productivity, but there are few signs now of an investment boom or of 
		innovations fundamentally changing the way work is done. Productivity 
		growth in the U.S. has averaged just one percent since 2005, half the 
		level of 1990-2004; in the past five years the annual growth rate has 
		been a dismal 0.5 percent. 
						
		
		  
						
		 
		"There is no shortage of explanation as to why wage growth remains tepid 
		– shadow slack, reduced bargaining power due to globalisation, 
		de-unionization, automation, etc. – but what is puzzling is that wage 
		growth, at least according to the average hourly earnings measure, was 
		clearly accelerating in 2015 and 2016," JPMorgan Economist Michael 
		Feroli wrote after the data release. 
		 
		"Why it would slow only in the last two quarters is a mystery." 
		 
		While most economists say the jobs numbers alone are enough to keep the 
		Federal Reserve on a path to hike rates again this year, the slow wages 
		growth implies limits to how high the Fed can push rates and raises 
		questions about the longer-term health of the U.S. economy, which 
		depends on consumer spending for 70 percent of its activity. 
						
		
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			Leaflets lie on a table at a booth at a military veterans' job fair 
			in Carson, California October 3, 2014. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson 
            
			  
International Monetary Fund data shows that across the developed world, the 
share of national income paid out to workers had fallen to less than 40 percent 
by 2015 from close to 55 percent in 1970, driven largely by technological change 
and globalisation. 
 
"You can’t continue to get all this job growth but there is no wage pressure. So 
something is not adding up at all," said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at 
TD Ameritrade in Chicago. 
  
In March 2014 Fed Chair Janet Yellen said she believed that "perhaps 3 and 4 
percent wage inflation would be normal." Now the level appears to be stuck 
lower. 
 
"The new benchmark for what we call good is lower than what we historically 
thought," said San Francisco Fed chief researcher Mary Daly, one of the Fed 
system's top labour economists. 
 
"I would suggest the landing place doesn't seem surprising to me given that we 
have very low productivity growth and inflation that’s not up to 2 percent," 
Daly said in an interview last month. 
 
Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said on Thursday the government could take 
some steps to boost productivity. Among these would be investing in basic 
research, infrastructure, education and public health, including clean air and 
drinking water. 
  
(With reporting by Charles Mikolajczak and Jennifer Ablan in New York and Lucia 
Mutikani in Washington; Editing by David Chance and Andrea Ricci) 
				 
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