Current:Home > MyWages, adjusted for inflation, are falling for new hires in sign of slowing job market -Thrive Success Strategies
Wages, adjusted for inflation, are falling for new hires in sign of slowing job market
View
Date:2025-04-16 13:37:59
If you need further proof that the nation’s formerly sizzling job market has gone cold, look to what had been perhaps the hottest part of the post-pandemic hiring frenzy: pay for newly hired workers.
After adjusting for inflation, average wages for new hires fell 1.5% over the 12 months ending in July – from $23.85 an hour to $23.51– the largest such decline in a decade, according to an analysis of Labor Department figures by the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research.
By contrast, inflation-adjusted earnings for typical workers staying in their jobs rose 2.3% during the same period, the Upjohn Institute study shows.
When the economy is accelerating, pay increases for new hires tend to outstrip those of existing employees as companies rapidly add positions and compete for a limited pool of job candidates, says Brad Hershbein, a senior economist at the Upjohn Institute. As job openings multiply, workers switch positions more frequently, further pressuring firms to fill openings and ratchet up wages.
“When the economy slows,” as it’s doing now, “that flips,” Hershbein said. Businesses still provide solid raises to existing staffers so they don’t lose them but there’s far less urgency to pay up to attract new workers, he said.
How is the job market doing right now?
The figures underscore that the labor market is softening more dramatically than the monthly jobs report shows and has been doing so for a longer period than believed, Hershbein says.
In August, U.S. employers added 142,000 jobs but have added an average of just 116,000 a month from June through August, well below the average 211,000 the previous three months, recent jobs reports show. Still, the unemployment rate, which the Federal Reserve watches closely, dipped back to a historically low 4.2% after rising to 4.3% the prior month.
The more worrisome data on new hires’ wages should help convince the Fed to cut its key interest rate by a half percentage point at a meeting this week now that inflation is easing and the job market is cooling, said Julia Pollak, chief economist of ZipRecruiter, a leading job site.
Recent hires, she added, “are on the bleeding edge of the workforce and they’re more sensitive to changes in the economy” than people staying in their jobs.
A ZipRecruiter survey in the second quarter suggests that job seekers have quickly lost leverage. Just 58% of U.S. workers increased their pay when they switched jobs, down from 70% previously. Just 30% of new hires said they were actively recruited, down from 46% early this year. And the share of new hires negotiating their salaries tumbled to 26% from 43%.
How much will the Fed cut rates in September?
But after the Fed lifted its benchmark rate to a 23-year high of 5.25% to 5.5% to help tame inflation in 2022 and 2023, Pollak, like most economists, thinks Fed officials will start with a more modest quarter-point rate cut.
“They may be behind the eight ball,” she says.
What happened as a result of the 'great resignation?'
Early in the COVID-19 health crisis, new hire salaries surged. From July 2020 to July 2022, during severe post-pandemic labor shortages and the job-hopping craze known as the "great resignation," wages for new hires jumped a total of 7% after figuring inflation, outpacing raises for existing workers, Upjohn Institute figures indicate.
The softening trend in pay for new hires actually began more than a year ago, with their annual earnings growing just 0.5% in the 12 months ending in July 2023 after accounting for inflation. Yearly pay gains averaged 2.5% in the first half of 2022 but slowed to just 1.3% in the second half, the Upjohn Institute study says.
Yet according to the most widely publicized employment figures, the labor market was booming in 2022, with new hires of well over 6 million a month, above the prepandemic level. And net job gains – after accounting for hiring and employee departures – averaged a robust 377,000 a month.
The new hire wage numbers reveal “the labor market was slowing for a lot longer than commonly thought,” Hershbein said.
That means it could take longer for the Fed to jolt the economy and job market by lowering interest rates next week and in the coming months.
“It’s like a freight train” that takes some time to stop and then propel in the other direction, Hershbein said. “Are we going to have a recession? We haven’t yet but we’re getting closer to that point.”
veryGood! (86565)
Related
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Russia puts exiled tycoon and opposition leader Khodorkovsky on wanted list for war comments
- DeSantis targets New York, California and Biden in his Florida State of the State address
- Red Cross declares an emergency blood shortage, as number of donors hits 20-year low
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Thierry Henry says he had depression during career and cried “almost every day” early in pandemic
- Dua Lipa Hilariously Struggles to Sit in Her Viral Bone Dress at the Golden Globes
- Border Patrol, Mexico's National Guard ramp up efforts to curb illegal border crossings
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Aid group says 6,618 migrants died trying to reach Spain by boat in 2023, more than double 2022
Ranking
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Virginia police identify suspect in 3 cold-case homicides from the 1980s, including victims of the Colonial Parkway Murders
- Michigan's Jim Harbaugh has a title, seat at the 'big person's table.' So is this goodbye?
- Barry Keoghan Details His Battle With Near-Fatal Flesh-Eating Disease
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Nigerian leader suspends poverty alleviation minister after financial transactions are questioned
- Planets align: Venus, Mercury and Mars meet up with moon early Tuesday
- Mean Girls’ Daniel Franzese Reveals Where He Thinks Damien Is Today
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
Moon landing attempt by U.S. company appears doomed after 'critical' fuel leak
The 'Epstein list' and why we need to talk about consent with our kids
Duct-taped and beaten to death over potty training. Mom will now spend 42 years in prison.
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
Barry Keoghan Details His Battle With Near-Fatal Flesh-Eating Disease
Supreme Court rejects appeal by ex-officer Tou Thao, who held back crowd as George Floyd lay dying
Michigan woman wins $2 million thanks to store clerk who picked out scratch off for her