现在情况更糟了吗? 自 2020 年 11 月以来实际工资有所下降 Worse Off Now? Real Wages Have Declined Since Nov. 2020

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/worse-now-real-wages-have-declined-nov-2020

在卡马拉·哈里斯担任总统期间,出口民意调查显示,主要州 46% 的选民认为他们的家庭状况比四年前更糟。 这种看法可能是由于通货膨胀超过了工资增长并降低了实际工资。 尽管失业率低、股价高等经济指标,许多美国人仍感受到通胀对其购买力的负面影响。 对比2020年11月至2024年9月累计工资涨幅和物价涨幅,名义工资上涨19.2%,而居民消费价格上涨20.6%。 结果,实际工资下降了 1.1%,这意味着美国人的经济状况比四年前略有恶化。

During Kamala Harris's presidency, exit polls revealed that 46% of voters in key states believed their families were worse off than four years prior. This perception may be due to inflation, which has outpaced wage growth and reduced real wages. Despite economic indicators such as low unemployment and high stock prices, many Americans feel the negative effects of inflation on their purchasing power. A comparison of cumulative wage increases and price hikes from November 2020 to September 2024 shows that, while nominal wages have risen by 19.2%, consumer prices have increased by 20.6%. As a result, real wages have declined by 1.1%, meaning Americans are slightly worse off financially than they were four years ago.


Worse Off Now? Real Wages Have Declined Since Nov. 2020

"Are you better off than you were four years ago?"

Any incumbent president seeking re-election is faced with this political litmus test.

A test that Kamala Harris, as the de-facto incumbent, apparently failed to pass.

As Statista's Felix Richter reports, according to exit polls, 46 percent of voters in key states said that their family was worse off now than it was four years ago, the highest ever in presidential exit polls. But is that really true or are we seeing what some economists described as a "vibecession", i.e. an overly negative perception of an economy that is doing alright?

While the U.S. economy has come through the inflation crisis relatively unscathed, with robust growth, low unemployment and high stock prices, many American families have not.

Or at least it hasn't felt that way.

The main problem with inflation is the fact that it hits consumers right where it hurts: the wallet.

In times of high inflation, when prices increase faster than nominal wages, real wages go down, meaning that workers see (and feel) the purchasing power of their income decline.

During the current inflation crisis, this has been the case from April 2021 to April 2023, when average real hourly earnings declined for 25 consecutive months on a year-over-year basis. In May 2023, real wages began to rise again as nominal wage growth outpaced inflation once again as it normally should.

By looking at cumulative wage growth and price increases since November 2020, we can at least try to answer the question of whether or not Americans are better off than they were four years ago and the answer is: not really.

Infographic: Worse Off Now? Real Wages Have Declined Since Nov. 2020 | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

Between November 2020 and September 2024, nominal wages increased 19.2 percent on aggregate.

During the same time, consumer prices have surged by 20.6 percent, though, meaning that prices hikes have erased any wage growth and left real wages 1.1 percent short off where they were four years ago.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/07/2024 - 17:20
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