Friday, July 31, 2015

Economic Growth Meager : Longer Hours, Not Higher Wages

Who knew? The latest figures that just came out from the government  indicates that the GDP for this quarter was 2.3%, which is terrible in it's self, but worse, this figure is not actuate. The government is using new methods to calculate the GDP now so as to make the economy look better then it actually is. It's just progressive politics. Deception rules the day.

Just watch what happens to the economic figures if a Republican wins the White House?

Longer Hours, Not Higher Wages, Have Driven Modest Earnings Growth
Source: Elise Gould, "Longer Hours, Not Higher Wages, Have Driven Modest Earnings Growth for Most American Households," Economic Policy Institute, July 23, 2015.

July 30, 2015

Elise Gould of the Economic Policy Institute finds that American households are working longer hours -- hours they used to have for other activities such as leisure or family time. These longer hours are the main reason why household earnings increased over the last 35 years.
  • Between 1979 and 2007, annual earnings of most households (those between the 20th and 80th percentiles of earnings) increased by 15.2 percent, rising to just under $60,000 by 2007.
  • During this period, the average hourly wages of these households grew $1.05 per hour, while annual hours rose by 289 hours.
The figure above shows the majority (61 percent) of the rise in annual earnings of middle-earning households was due to increasing annual hours and not increasing wages. Less than half (only 39 percent) of the increase in annual earnings was due to increasing hourly wages.

For lower-earning households, increasing annual hours contributed nearly 75 percent to increases in annual earnings. Meanwhile, households at the top experienced the reverse phenomenon: for them, increasing hourly earnings explained over 90 percent of rising annual earnings.

So that there is no concern about cherry-picking endpoints, it's useful to note that if we examine the full period (1979-2013), the meager rise in annual earnings for moderate-earning households is driven even more by increasing hours, as opposed to increasing hourly wages. During this period, increasing hours contributed 74 percent to annual middle-earning household earnings, while hourly earnings only contributed the remaining 26 percent.
 

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