The level of productivity doubled in the U.S. nonfarm business sector between 1970 and 2006. Wages, or more accurately total compensation per hour, increased at approximately the same annual rate during that period if nominal compensation is adjusted for inflation in the same way as the nominal output measure that is used to calculate productivity. Total employee compensation as a share of national income was 66 percent of national income in 1970 and 64 percent in 2006. This measure of the labor compensation share has been remarkably stable since the 1970s. It rose from an average of 62 percent in the decade of the 1960s to 66 percent in the decades of the 1970s and 1980s and then declined to 65 percent in the decade of the 1990s where it h...
According to many recent press reports, the American worker faces a dismal picture of falling real w...
Changes in real wages, or wages adjusted for the cost of living, are the most direct route through w...
[Excerpt] Increases in productivity have long been associated with increases in compensation for emp...
Much has been written in this business cycle regarding the rapid increases in productivity and the s...
The rise of earnings inequality in the United States has garnered attention in both the political an...
Positive relationship between labor productivity and worker compensation has been puzzled by economi...
This thesis investigates the real compensation- labor productivity gap in the United States, using a...
This report makes a series of adjustments to the most common measure of U.S. productivity growth (i....
This paper notes that the typical worker's earnings have increased little over the last six years, d...
[Excerpt] Productivity growth increased substantially in the 1990s. For each hour that a worker spen...
The present study is the third in a series of three papers devoted to issues in the measurement of p...
In the 1990s, conventional measures of productivity growth, or the growth in output per worker, have...
Conventional theory predicts that productivity gains lead to pay hikes. Pay increases, however, can ...
Labor productivity growth, a measure of output per unit of work, is closely tied to gains in wages a...
This 27 page thesis examines the effect of productivity gains on the overall economy of the United S...
According to many recent press reports, the American worker faces a dismal picture of falling real w...
Changes in real wages, or wages adjusted for the cost of living, are the most direct route through w...
[Excerpt] Increases in productivity have long been associated with increases in compensation for emp...
Much has been written in this business cycle regarding the rapid increases in productivity and the s...
The rise of earnings inequality in the United States has garnered attention in both the political an...
Positive relationship between labor productivity and worker compensation has been puzzled by economi...
This thesis investigates the real compensation- labor productivity gap in the United States, using a...
This report makes a series of adjustments to the most common measure of U.S. productivity growth (i....
This paper notes that the typical worker's earnings have increased little over the last six years, d...
[Excerpt] Productivity growth increased substantially in the 1990s. For each hour that a worker spen...
The present study is the third in a series of three papers devoted to issues in the measurement of p...
In the 1990s, conventional measures of productivity growth, or the growth in output per worker, have...
Conventional theory predicts that productivity gains lead to pay hikes. Pay increases, however, can ...
Labor productivity growth, a measure of output per unit of work, is closely tied to gains in wages a...
This 27 page thesis examines the effect of productivity gains on the overall economy of the United S...
According to many recent press reports, the American worker faces a dismal picture of falling real w...
Changes in real wages, or wages adjusted for the cost of living, are the most direct route through w...
[Excerpt] Increases in productivity have long been associated with increases in compensation for emp...