The Pandemic-Related Public-Private Sector Pay Gap is Finally Narrowing 
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

The Pandemic-Related Public-Private Sector Pay Gap is Finally Narrowing 

According to today’s Employment Cost Index report, wage disinflation slowed, and so did real wage growth. Private sector wages and salaries rose 4.5% over the year, down only 0.1 percentage points from last quarter, and over-the-year real wage growth fell from 1.7% to 0.8% in Q3. Wage growth for public sector workers surged, however, after lagging behind since early in the pandemic.

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Gradual Disinflation Continues, Despite a Recent Surge in Gas Prices
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

Gradual Disinflation Continues, Despite a Recent Surge in Gas Prices

Topline year-over-year inflation held steady in September at 3.7%, with month-over-month inflation slowing to 0.4% from 0.6% in August, despite the recent surge in gas prices. Core inflation (which excludes energy and food) fell to 4.1% from 4.3% over the year, holding steady at 0.3% over the month.

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A Blowout Jobs Report Shows Strong Job Gains Across the Board
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

A Blowout Jobs Report Shows Strong Job Gains Across the Board

It is hard to find any bad news in today’s jobs report. With an acceleration in job growth to 336K payrolls in September and upward revisions for the prior months, the jobs data is finally consistent with real-time estimates of third-quarter GDP growth. Together, they suggest a summertime boom.

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State Employment Trends Continue to Diverge
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

State Employment Trends Continue to Diverge

States where employment has grown rapidly over the past year continue to outperform, and those where employment has been sluggish continue to lag behind. Three of the states with the largest employment gains since the pandemic continued to experience the fastest job growth rates.

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A Solid August Jobs Report Shows the Labor Market in a Sweet Spot
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

A Solid August Jobs Report Shows the Labor Market in a Sweet Spot

According to today’s Jobs Report, the labor market overall is continuing to soar at an ideal cruising altitude—high enough to keep the unemployment rate below 4% while creating more opportunities for workers to come in off the sidelines, but low enough so as not to cause a resurgence of inflation.

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Real wage growth has returned to its pre-pandemic pace and the gender wage gap has reached its narrowest point on record
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

Real wage growth has returned to its pre-pandemic pace and the gender wage gap has reached its narrowest point on record

In the year through Q2 2023, over-the-year real wage growth finally returned to the pre-pandemic pace of about 1.7%, according to data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Wages still have considerable ground to make up, following two quarters of sub-trend growth, and six straight quarters of real wage declines before that.

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Jobs Market Shows Signs of Cooling as Summer Hits
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

Jobs Market Shows Signs of Cooling as Summer Hits

June is a huge month for hiring—for summer jobs, new college graduates, and teens. Given strong recent growth in air travel, restaurant dining, and hotel occupancy—paired with a 15% year-to-date increase in the stock market and a recent rebound in consumer confidence—the June Jobs Report was poised to be another blowout. Instead, it showed signs of the labor market cooling—perhaps the result of the Fed’s rate hikes finally biting.

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The May JOLTS Report
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

The May JOLTS Report

Job openings declined by half a million, but 3 of 4 key indicators—hiring, quits, and layoffs—improved, suggesting that the labor market remains robust

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The May Jobs Report Sends Mixed Signals
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

The May Jobs Report Sends Mixed Signals

A contradictory May Jobs Report sent mixed signals about the state of the U.S. labor market. The establishment survey was a blockbuster, reporting a 339K payroll job gain; the household survey was a downer, reporting a 310K employment loss and an unusually large increase in the unemployment rate from 3.4% to 3.7%.

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