Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
US Wage Growth Slowed in the Final Quarter of 2022
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 2 years ago on
January 31, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Pay and benefits for America’s workers grew at a healthy but more gradual pace in the final three months of 2022, a third straight slowdown, which could help reassure the Federal Reserve that wage gains won’t fuel higher inflation.

Wages and benefits, such as health insurance, grew 1% in the October-December quarter compared with the previous three months. That marked a solid gain, though it was slower than the 1.2% increase in the July-September quarter.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell and economists consider the data released Tuesday, known as the employment cost index, to be the most comprehensive gauge of labor costs. Powell last year cited a sharp increase in the index as a key reason why the Fed accelerated its interest rate hikes.

On Wednesday, Powell and his Fed colleagues are set to raise their benchmark interest rate by a quarter-point to a range of 4.5% to 4.75%, their eighth straight rate hike. But as inflation has cooled, the central bank has been boosting rates by smaller increments. Last year, the Fed raised its key rate by three-quarters of a point four times.

Powell has said that he sees rapid wage gains, particularly in the labor-intensive service sector, as the biggest impediment to bringing inflation down to the Fed’s 2% target. When restaurants, hotels, veterinary clinics and other services companies raise pay, they often pass along those higher costs by charging their customers higher prices.

Overall inflation is steadily cooling, having eased to 6.5% in December compared with a year ago. That is down from a 40-year high of 9.1% in June. Powell’s concern, though, is that fast-growing wages will cause inflation to plateau at around 4% — still twice as high as the Fed’s target.

Workers’ pay has grown at a solid pace for roughly the past two years. With labor shortages afflicting a variety of industries, many employers have steadily boosted wages and salaries, while offering more lavish benefits, to try to attract and keep employees. For most people, inflation has still outpaced those pay gains. Yet wage increases have helped many consumers maintain their spending despite higher prices.

In last year’s first quarter, total worker compensation jumped 1.4% — the most on records dating to 2001. Before then, quarterly compensation growth had rarely topped 1%.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Thousands of Pilgrims Trek Through New Mexico Desert to Historic Adobe Church for Good Friday

DON'T MISS

Rams’ Draft Headquarters to Be at LAFD Air Base to Honor First Responders to Wildfires

DON'T MISS

The US Has a Single Rare Earths Mine. Chinese Export Limits Are Energizing a Push for More

DON'T MISS

A Startling Admission From a GOP Senator: ‘We Are All Afraid’

DON'T MISS

Trump Administration Kicks off Plan for Expanded Offshore Drilling

DON'T MISS

Google to Appeal Against Part of US Court’s Decision in Monopoly Case

DON'T MISS

How to Catch the Shooting Stars of Spring’s First Meteor Shower, the Lyrids

DON'T MISS

US Intel Contradicts Trump Claims Linking Gang to Venezuelan Government

DON'T MISS

NASA’s Lucy Spacecraft Is Speeding Toward Another Close Encounter With an Asteroid

DON'T MISS

The Abrego Garcia Case Pulls Democrats Into the Immigration Debate Trump Wants to Have

UP NEXT

Average US Rate on a 30-Year Mortgage Climbs to 6.83%, Highest Level Since Late February

UP NEXT

Trump: We Will Have a Trade Deal With China

UP NEXT

Trump Slams Fed’s Powell Over Rates, Saying Termination Can’t ‘Come Fast Enough’

UP NEXT

Dollar, US Stocks Find Some Stability as Trade Talks Help the Mood

UP NEXT

Temu and Shein Say They’re Raising Prices Due to Tariffs

UP NEXT

White House to Use 30,000 Real Eggs for Easter Egg Roll Despite Shortages, Dividing Farmers

UP NEXT

I Have Never Been More Afraid for My Country’s Future

UP NEXT

Fed’s Powell: Economy Slowing in Q1, Can Wait for Greater Clarity

UP NEXT

Wall Street Tumbles, Nvidia Slumps After New US Chip Export Controls

UP NEXT

Retail Sales Rise 1.4% in March as Shoppers Stock Up on Big Ticket Items Ahead of Tariffs

A Startling Admission From a GOP Senator: ‘We Are All Afraid’

28 minutes ago

Trump Administration Kicks off Plan for Expanded Offshore Drilling

31 minutes ago

Google to Appeal Against Part of US Court’s Decision in Monopoly Case

34 minutes ago

How to Catch the Shooting Stars of Spring’s First Meteor Shower, the Lyrids

37 minutes ago

US Intel Contradicts Trump Claims Linking Gang to Venezuelan Government

41 minutes ago

NASA’s Lucy Spacecraft Is Speeding Toward Another Close Encounter With an Asteroid

49 minutes ago

The Abrego Garcia Case Pulls Democrats Into the Immigration Debate Trump Wants to Have

58 minutes ago

Katy Perry Gears Up for Sci-Fi Inspired World Tour

1 hour ago

10,000 Pages of Records About Robert F. Kennedy’s 1968 Assassination Are Released

1 hour ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Tien Hoang Nguyen

1 hour ago

Thousands of Pilgrims Trek Through New Mexico Desert to Historic Adobe Church for Good Friday

SANTA FE, N.M. — A unique Holy Week tradition is drawing thousands of Catholic pilgrims to a small adobe church in the hills of northern New...

19 minutes ago

19 minutes ago

Thousands of Pilgrims Trek Through New Mexico Desert to Historic Adobe Church for Good Friday

23 minutes ago

Rams’ Draft Headquarters to Be at LAFD Air Base to Honor First Responders to Wildfires

27 minutes ago

The US Has a Single Rare Earths Mine. Chinese Export Limits Are Energizing a Push for More

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) walks out of the Senate chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, Feb. 20, 2025. Murkowski, who has routinely broken with her party to criticize President Donald Trump, has made a startling admission about the reality of serving in public office at a time when an unbound leader in the Oval Office is bent on retribution against his political foes. (Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times)
28 minutes ago

A Startling Admission From a GOP Senator: ‘We Are All Afraid’

President Donald Trump looks on on the day he signs executive orders in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 17, 2025. (REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein)
31 minutes ago

Trump Administration Kicks off Plan for Expanded Offshore Drilling

34 minutes ago

Google to Appeal Against Part of US Court’s Decision in Monopoly Case

37 minutes ago

How to Catch the Shooting Stars of Spring’s First Meteor Shower, the Lyrids

41 minutes ago

US Intel Contradicts Trump Claims Linking Gang to Venezuelan Government

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend