The Declining Fortunes of (Most) American Workers

Laura A. Harvey, J. Rockey
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

While real US GDP per capita has increased around 80% since 1980, median incomes have remained roughly constant. However, as this paper documents, this stagnation masks an important decline. Male median real incomes have been lower than that of their forebears, at every age, for the last 30 years. We show that this is true across the life cycle and across the wage distribution. Moreover, younger generations have also had to wait longer to reach peak earnings. Further analysis shows that this decline is particularly concentrated on high school graduates. The same pattern is found for female high school graduates yet, African American and Hispanic American women are an important exception. Variance decompositions suggest that these intergenerational differences are quantitatively important. While reductions in hours worked cannot explain the decline, substantial decreases in the labour share are consistent with decreasing incomes in the face of productivity growth. Calculations suggest that hedonic improvements in the quality of goods and services would have to have been equivalent to 30% of younger cohorts’ lifetime consumption for their consumption levels to match those of their predecessors
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(大多数)美国工人的财富在下降
自1980年以来,美国实际人均GDP增长了80%左右,而收入中位数却基本保持不变。然而,正如本文所述,这种停滞掩盖了一个重要的衰退。在过去的30年里,男性的实际收入中位数一直低于他们的祖先,无论在哪个年龄段。我们表明,这在整个生命周期和整个工资分配中都是正确的。此外,年轻一代也不得不等待更长时间才能达到收入峰值。进一步的分析表明,这种下降尤其集中在高中毕业生身上。在女性高中毕业生中也发现了同样的模式,非裔美国人和西班牙裔美国女性是一个重要的例外。方差分解表明这些代际差异在数量上是重要的。虽然工作时间的减少不能解释这种下降,但劳动收入占比的大幅下降与面对生产率增长的收入下降是一致的。计算表明,商品和服务质量的享乐性改善必须相当于年轻一代€™一生消费的30%,他们的消费水平才能赶上他们的前辈
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