|
|
|
|
|
by JumpCrisscross
73 days ago
|
|
> by "real wages" you mean "Employed full time: Median usual weekly real earnings: Wage and salary workers: 16 years and over" Yes. > You chose a number that specifically factored out the negatives like dropping participation rate[1] and underemployment I chose a consistent dataset. One of many. (Dropping participation rate is affected by stuff like demographics in addition to underemployment.) If you have a credible source that shows declining real wages since 2000, I'd love to see it. > don't see why you're citing the nominal federal minimum wage. The nominal value is totally irrelevant to the conversation. $1 is still nominally $1, but according to the link it is also now $0.51 in purchasing power If $1 is 51¢ today, then $1.40 is 71¢ today. Rising nominal wages is how real wage gains are generated. |
|
My original comment was about growing inequality and my second comment was describing why the metric you cited and median real wages in general don't address that issue. So no, I will not be looking for a better real wages metric, because it is not the appropriate measure to capture inequality. You can find plenty of numbers and charts on that problem here[1].
[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_inequality_in_the_Unite...