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Thursday, February 20, 2020

The Beginnings of Wage Inflation

Last year, we estimated that pointed out that there were still 7.4 million workers missing from the labor force. The presence of so many missing workers would dampen wage growth for some time to come. Today, the number of missing workers is down slightly to 6.8 million workers as of January 2020.



And, true enough, wage growth has remained rather subdued given the low official unemployment rate of 3.6% as of January 2020.



But certain sectors of the labor market are starting to tighten. For instance, the prime age (25 to 54 years old) working group is now reflecting a shortage of workers of 191 thousand people.



This indicates that wages for this age group could tighten in the not too distant future.



The tightness of the prime working age group is not shared equally among the sexes. The labor market for Prime Age Women Workers is very tight, with an estimated shortage of almost 1 million women as of January 2020.



For men, it is an altogether a different story. There are still around 800K Prime Age men missing from the labor market..




This gap for Prime Age men is being filled very slowly, only a few thousand a month. But once that gap is filled, wages should start rising up.

Related Posts: Why There Is Still No Wage Inflation: There are 8.1 Million Missing American Workers

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