(Bloomberg View) — For all the positives in the latest U.S. jobs report, employees and the Federal Reserve didn't get one thing they've been looking for: higher wages. Therein lies a central conundrum of this economic expansion.
The February employment report suggests that the economy weathered January's stock-market turmoil in decent shape. Nonfarm employers added an estimated 242,000 jobs, and the unemployment rate held steady at a low 4.9 percent.
The demand for workers, though, didn't translate into better pay. The average hourly wage actually dropped 3 cents to $25.35. That left it up just 2.2 percent from a year earlier, well short of the pace that prevailed before the recession.
So where will the raises come from? One odd fact about the current expansion is that workers' total income growth, meager as it is, has outpaced the broader economy.
Since the recession hit bottom in mid-2009, the combination of hiring and increased wages has caused aggregate weekly earnings of production and nonsupervisory workers to grow at an average annualized rate of 4.2 percent, well exceeding nominal gross domestic product growth of 3.7 percent — something that hasn't happened in any of the previous four recoveries. Here's how that looks: