Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Subdued inflation takes average wages to near 3 year high
- by New Deal democrat
So anyway, we've gone from a dry spell where there was barely any data to write about, to a deluge of new information, which means I don't have the time to write posts highlighting all the interesting (well, interesting to a nerd like me) trends!
Yesterday was the first time since I've been using the price of gas as a KISS method to track inflation that my forecast was off: non-seasonally adjusted CPI was -0.2% and seasonally adjusted was unchanged, vs. unchanged NSA and +0.3% seasonally adjusted as I had forecast. But YoY inflation was +1.2%, which was within 0.1% of my +1.3% forecast.
One by-product of this subdued inflation, caused in large part by somnolent gas prices, is that real, inflation-adjusted wages are starting to rise again. Here's a graph of average hourly wages on non-supervisory workers adjusted by inflation for the last 10 years:
Yes, real wages did spike higher during the Great Recession, because in late 2008 gas prices fell from $4.25 a gallon to about $1.50 a gallon. They declined in 2011 and 2012 as gas prices went back as high as $3.95 a gallon again.
With the loosening of the Oil choke collar in 2013, however, real average wages as of yesterday rose to their highest level since February 2011, nearly 3 years ago.
The trend has turned positive, with YoY real wages rising by about 1%, as shown in the graph below of the YoY% change in real wages:
Since YoY real wages are about 1% below their 2010 peak, this means that we could actually establish a new high in average (not necessarily median) real wages for nonsupervisory workers by the end of 2014 - if gas prices remain somnolent.
Not grounds for "Allelulia's," but a welcome trend nevertheless. One which is going to be overlooked by about 98% of econobloggers because it doesn't fit their worldview.