Tackle wage inequality to boost growth, says report

Wages today are nearly 20 per cent below a level that would exist had wage growth continued after 2008 and the average British worker is nearly £5,000 worse off as a result, according to a new report from Bath University’s Institute for Policy Research.

Despite unemployment having fallen rapidly since the peak in 2011, the report highlights that government cannot rely on this measure alone to re-start sustained wage growth. Instead, it argues, productivity growth, business and infrastructure investment and greater equality in the distribution of the proceeds of recovery are all needed to ensure real wage recovery.

It also suggests that real wages need be linked to productivity again, as was the historic norm. Without correcting this, the report authors suggest, any recovery is likely to be focused on top earners not ordinary workers.

It points out that after the last recession in the 1990s, real wages began to recover two years after the peak in unemployment, with subsequent growth recuperating all wage losses and returning salaries in line with trend levels within eight years. Against this precedent, says the report, the wage recovery in 2014 is a long way behind schedule.

Lead author of the report from the University’s Department of Social & Policy Sciences, Professor Paul Gregg says: “The recent fall in unemployment is likely to be sufficient to stop real wages falling further by the end of 2014. Continued falls in unemployment will lead to modest wage recovery, but this alone will not go far enough.

“For a sustained wage recovery, the economy needs to generate a return to the levels of productivity growth seen over the 25 years before the crash, but that has been notably absent over the last six years. As labour gets scarce and more expensive, we should expect firms to increase investment generating productivity improvements. However, even this will not be enough for sustained real wage gains unless the distribution of the returns from productivity growth can be channelled back to ordinary workers.”

Other than falling unemployment, the report suggests that steady improvements in economic efficiency and improved wage equality both must be met in order to regain the 20 per cent loss in real wages.

It argues that a return to improving economic efficiency requires a major boost to business investment in order to recover the lost ground since the financial crash, also reflecting a need for investment in infrastructure and housing to reduce the pressures of inflation.

Yet the hardest agenda politically is how to reconnect earnings with productivity, which it says requires policymakers to address issues of rising inequality in the labour market.

Professor Gregg adds: “A major challenge for government is how to control the extraordinary and rapid increases in pay and pensions to executives, which has far outstripped company profitability. If productivity improvements are to benefit all workers, the issue of wage inequality must come into sharp focus.”

 





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