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A Decade of Flat Wages

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A Decade of Flat Wages

The Key Barrier to Shared Prosperity and a Rising Middle Class

EPI,

5 min read
5 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

Maybe it’s time you got a raise.

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Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Comprehensive
  • Analytical
  • Scientific

Recommendation

How can the United States get its economy out of the doldrums? After a brief expansionary period with “cash for clunkers” schemes and other wheezes at the start of the financial crisis, the focus has remained firmly on monetary solutions. Economists Lawrence Mishel and Heidi Shierholz make a case for returning to an earlier approach to economic policy. They emphasize jobs, workers’ bargaining rights and wage rises to drive economic growth, with a particular focus on boosting the beleaguered middle class. While heavy on statistics, their paper is highly accessible, and getAbstract recommends their analysis of the US’s stagnant wage market to anyone looking for alternative views on how to spur economic growth.

Summary

An economy that does not allow its people, across all social strata, to enjoy an equitable stake in the wealth they produce will be unsustainable, as it will have to depend on “asset bubbles and escalating household debt” to grow. The new political emphasis on developing the economy from the “middle out” – that is, by strengthening the middle class – has yet to focus on the main difficulty that both blue-collar and white-collar workers face: a faulty “wage-setting mechanism” that has been unable to capture a share of growing productivity...

About the Authors

Lawrence Mishel is president of the Economic Policy Institute, where Heidi Shierholz is an economist.


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