The wage share – wages expressed as a share of total national income – has fallen since the early 1980s, highlighting the decoupling of earnings from output and accounting for a third of the decline in median wages relative to GDP in the UK over the last 35 years. Howard Reed summarises his recent report, arguing a new social contract is required, and estimates the contribution that a selection of policies might make towards reversing the decline in the wage share
In the long-run at the macro level, the real pay of workers tends to follow labour productivity. In ...
As in many European countries, labour productivity in the UK has been stagnant since the start of th...
Results of two new projects for FEPS and TASC by Onaran and Obst (2015) and Stockhammer and Wildauer...
The share of wages in national income has declined across the developed world over the last thirty y...
Since the 1980s there has been a clear reversal of the trends towards relatively egalitarian income ...
Over the last four decades, the decline of trade unions and weakened collective voice of the UK work...
Alexander Guschanski and Ozlem Onaran (2018) of the University of Greenwich Political Economy Resear...
National minimum wage increases over the next four years are – on their own – unlikely to solve the ...
Looking at current labour market trends and assessing the credibility of the parties’ manifestos - b...
The last four decades have been characterised by drastic changes in the distribution of income betwe...
The working people in the UK have good reasons to vote to stay in the European Union, but not for th...
Between 1970 and today, the share of national income going to labour (wage share) has fallen signi...
A new report by the Resolution Foundation shows that the number of people earning less than a living...
I begin by providing a non-technical summary of the Post-Keynesian model of wage-led growth. I then ...
The revival of support for a living wage has reopened a long-run debate over the extent to which ac...
In the long-run at the macro level, the real pay of workers tends to follow labour productivity. In ...
As in many European countries, labour productivity in the UK has been stagnant since the start of th...
Results of two new projects for FEPS and TASC by Onaran and Obst (2015) and Stockhammer and Wildauer...
The share of wages in national income has declined across the developed world over the last thirty y...
Since the 1980s there has been a clear reversal of the trends towards relatively egalitarian income ...
Over the last four decades, the decline of trade unions and weakened collective voice of the UK work...
Alexander Guschanski and Ozlem Onaran (2018) of the University of Greenwich Political Economy Resear...
National minimum wage increases over the next four years are – on their own – unlikely to solve the ...
Looking at current labour market trends and assessing the credibility of the parties’ manifestos - b...
The last four decades have been characterised by drastic changes in the distribution of income betwe...
The working people in the UK have good reasons to vote to stay in the European Union, but not for th...
Between 1970 and today, the share of national income going to labour (wage share) has fallen signi...
A new report by the Resolution Foundation shows that the number of people earning less than a living...
I begin by providing a non-technical summary of the Post-Keynesian model of wage-led growth. I then ...
The revival of support for a living wage has reopened a long-run debate over the extent to which ac...
In the long-run at the macro level, the real pay of workers tends to follow labour productivity. In ...
As in many European countries, labour productivity in the UK has been stagnant since the start of th...
Results of two new projects for FEPS and TASC by Onaran and Obst (2015) and Stockhammer and Wildauer...