April 21, 2025

3 thoughts on “Another Trump FAIL: Worker pay rate hits highest level since 2008

  1. If one accepts the modern-day premise that the president of the United States of America has among his other constitutional duties making sure American workers are getting pay raises, then yes, I suppose from the above that one might conclude that Trump is doing a bang-up job as president.

    For some more insight into this issue, I suggest the Marketwatch article “U.S. gains 157,000 jobs in July as unemployment falls to 3.9%” by Jeffry Bartash published Aug. 3, 2018, to wit:

    Far-flung complaints about how hard it is to find good workers still aren’t inducing companies to jack up salaries and wages, however.

    Hourly pay rose 7 cents in July to $25.07, but the 12-month rate of wage gains was unchanged at 2.7%.

    And even those increases have been largely eaten up by rising inflation.

    Wages usually rise 3% to 4% a year when the labor market is as tight as it is now.

    end quotes

    Is the American worker doing just great based on that?

    Call me a sceptic.

    Getting back to the Marketwatch article:

    The economy accelerated in the spring to a heady 4.1% rate of growth, helped by tax cuts and a big burst of government spending that’s added a lot of stimulus.

    “The primary reason for the hiring is increased government spending.”

    “Businesses are responding to that,” contends chief economist Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics.

    “The 12-month trend for wage inflation remained a 2.7% – weaker than expected given the ultra-low unemployment conditions,” noted senior economist Ben Ayers of Nationwide.

    end quotes

    Hmmmmmm.

  2. The consumer-price index rose 0.2% in July; a reading of core prices rose by the same amount.

    The 12-month rate of core inflation rose to 2.4%, the highest rate since September 2008.

    Mike Loewengart, vice president of investment strategy at E*Trade, said that the CPI data “sends a signal that inflation is here to contend with.”

    “Investors have reason to take caution, with stagnant wage growth this news could start affecting their wallet.”

    – MARKETWATCH By Mark DeCambre and Ryan Vlastelica Published: Aug. 10, 2018

  3. The increase in the CPI over the past 12 months was 2.9%, unchanged from June.[/b][/color]

    The 12-month rate of core inflation rose to 2.4%, the highest rate since September 2008.

    The steady uptick in inflation is taking a bite out of household income.

    Real or inflation-adjusted hourly wages were flat in July, and they were down 0.2% over the past year.

    – MARKETWATCH By Greg Robb Published: Aug. 10, 2018

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