July's inflation-adjusted hourly wages declined 0.1%. This certainly isn't a sign of a "healthy" job market or economy. There are still almost 8 million Americans who are unemployed. However, this administration has manipulated the labor force participation rate to reduce the calculated unemployment rate to 5.0%. If the same labor force participation rate was used today that was used from 1996 through December 2000, the calculated unemployment rate would be 7%, not 5%.
The decline in wages verifies this statistical manipulation. Wages would rise if the demand for labor was truly rising. But wages are not rising, because the number of those truly unemployed is much higher than the Bush corporatocracy claims. As a result, the actual supply of labor is much higher than would be suggested from the manipulated unemployment statistics.
An increased supply of anything decreases the price. In this case, the increase is in supply of workers, and the price is worker wages. This puts constant downward pressure on wages, and is responsible for the decline in wages.
Inflation-adjusted wages are now 0.6% lower than they were in January. This puts the annual rate of wage decline at 1.0% This information can be found at the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics at:
http://data.bls.gov/PDQ/servlet/SurveyOutputServlet?data_tool=latest_numbers&series_id=CES0500000049Wages, when adjusted for inflation, are now 1.5% less than they were in November of 2003. Wages have been on a constant downward path since November of 2003. The only aspects of the economy that are increasing are corporate profits and housing prices.
The lowered "official" unemployment statistics are the result of statistical manipulation. If jobs were truly increasing, and labor demand was truly increasing, hourly wages would also be increasing. This is simple supply-and-demand dynamics. The fact that wages have NOT increased discredits current claims that the job market is "improving."
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