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Rapid wage growth at the bottom has offset rising US inequality.


ABSTRACT: US earnings inequality has not increased in the last decade. This marks the first sustained reversal of rising earnings inequality since 1980. We document this shift across eight data sources using worker surveys, employer-reported data, and administrative data. The reversal is due to a shrinking gap between low-wage and median-wage workers. In contrast, the gap between top and median workers has persisted. Rising pay for low-wage workers is not mainly due to the changing composition of workers or jobs, minimum wage increases, or workplace-specific sources of inequality. Instead, it is due to broadly rising pay in low-wage occupations, which has particularly benefited workers in tightening labor markets. Rebounding post-Great Recession labor demand at the bottom offset enduring drivers of inequality.

SUBMITTER: Aeppli C 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9586320 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Rapid wage growth at the bottom has offset rising US inequality.

Aeppli Clem C   Wilmers Nathan N  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20221003 42


US earnings inequality has not increased in the last decade. This marks the first sustained reversal of rising earnings inequality since 1980. We document this shift across eight data sources using worker surveys, employer-reported data, and administrative data. The reversal is due to a shrinking gap between low-wage and median-wage workers. In contrast, the gap between top and median workers has persisted. Rising pay for low-wage workers is not mainly due to the changing composition of workers  ...[more]

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