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Wage growth outpaces inflation in three sectors

Created at 11 Jun · 5:30 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

Despite overall inflation exceeding private-sector wage growth, the information, utilities, and construction sectors are seeing wages rise faster than inflation. This trend is linked to labor demand and supply dynamics within these industries.

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Key Numbers

4.2%May inflation rate
3.4%Private-sector wage growth in May
1%Information sector employment decline since January
11%Information sector employment drop from peak
610,000Net job growth in private education and health services
458,100Healthcare job gains within private education and health services

Who's Involved

Elizabeth Renter
Senior economist at NerdWallet
Daniel Zhao
Chief economist at Glassdoor
Kory Kantenga
Head of economics for the Americas at LinkedIn
Wage growth outpaces inflation in three sectors

↳ Why This Matters

The data highlights disparities in the labor market, showing that while overall inflation is straining consumer spending power, specific sectors are experiencing conditions that allow wages to keep pace with or exceed rising costs, driven by labor demand and supply dynamics.

Key facts

  • Inflation in May reached 4.2%, surpassing private-sector wage growth of 3.4%.
  • The information sector, utilities, and construction are experiencing wage growth exceeding inflation.
  • Employment in the information sector has declined despite higher average hourly earnings.
  • Healthcare and private education saw the lowest wage growth but the highest job gains.
  • Labor shortages are cited as a reason for rising wages in utilities and construction.

Inflation in May rose to 4.2%, exceeding private-sector wage growth of 3.4% for the second consecutive month, according to new data. However, three sectors are still seeing wages grow faster than the rate of inflation: information, utilities, and construction.

The information sector's wage growth was more than a percentage point above inflation. However, employment in this sector has decreased by 11% from its peak in late 2022 and by 1% since January. Economists suggest that workforce reductions might be disproportionately affecting lower-wage workers, thereby increasing the average hourly earnings of the remaining employees.

In contrast, private education and health services experienced the lowest wage growth but recorded the highest net job growth last month, with healthcare contributing the majority of the 610,000 new jobs. Daniel Zhao, chief economist at Glassdoor, noted that stagnant wage growth alongside job expansion makes it difficult for workers to keep pace with inflation.

Utilities and construction are the other sectors where wage growth is outpacing inflation. Experts attribute this to employers facing labor supply shortages, leading them to increase wages to attract new candidates. Kory Kantenga, LinkedIn's head of economics for the Americas, cautioned that even in sectors with wage growth exceeding inflation, not all workers benefit equally, as annual raises are not universal, and some may not keep up with rising costs.

Frequently asked questions

The information sector, utilities, and construction are currently experiencing wage growth that is higher than the rate of inflation.

Inflation in May reached 4.2%, marking the first time since 2023 that it has exceeded this level.

Private-sector wage growth in May was 3.4%, which is lower than the inflation rate of 4.2%.

Economists suggest that workforce reductions may be impacting lower-wage workers more severely, thus increasing the average hourly earnings of the remaining employees.

What Happens Next

01Continued monitoring of inflation and wage growth data.
02Analysis of sector-specific employment trends and their impact on wages.

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How It Developed

Inflation in May exceeded 4% for the first time since 2023.
Private-sector wage growth was 3.4% in May, trailing inflation.
The information sector showed wage growth over a percentage point above inflation.
Employment in the information sector is down 11% from its peak in late 2022.
Private education and health services had the lowest wage growth but highest job growth.
Healthcare accounted for most of the job gains in private education and health services.
Utilities and construction were the other two sectors where wages outpaced inflation.
Labor supply shortages are likely driving wage increases in utilities and construction.

Sources

T1
The 3 sectors where wage growth is still outpacing inflationBusiness Insider

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