ECB will start buying ABS, covered bonds in October
Jobs Day! First Impressions–It’s a disappointing report, but one month does not a new trend make. by Jared Bernstein
As Dean Baker and I stress, and EPI economists makes the same case here, one standard benchmark is the rate of productivity growth:
…for workers to get their fair share of the economy’s growth, real wages should keep pace with productivity growth. Productivity growth has been weak recently, most economists put the underlying trend at close to 1.5 percent. This means that wage growth at a 3.5 percent annual rate (2 percent inflation plus 1.5 percent productivity growth) would be consistent with the Fed’s inflation target.
But there’s even more room for non-inflationary wage growth than that. In recent years we’ve seen a large shift within national income from wages to profits. Wage growth paid for by a shift back toward to a more normal split between wages and profits does not put pressure on prices.
So the persistent trend in average nominal hourly wages of about 2% per year has a lot of room to grow.
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