3 Reasons You’ll Likely Get a Raise in 2015

Pay Raise - Gephardt Daily

3 Reasons You Will Likely Get a Raise in 2015

 

Pay Raise - Gephardt DailyAmerican workers should feel their best since the start of the Great Recession. Unemployment is at its lowest level since 2008.

Yet while jobs have returned, wages have remained relatively stagnant, rising just 2% in the past year. More people may be clocking in, but a sense of “just getting by”continues to permeate the national mindset.

Here are three reasons wages are likely to rise next year:

1. People are finding jobs

Short-term unemployment, which tracks workers who are out of the job market for six months or less, is at its lowest since the start of the recession. This shows a strong market for workers who come with readily available skills and can often demand higher wages.

 

exit poll earnings  Conventional economic models often use the total     U.S. unemployment rate (currently 5.8%) as the         measure of labor market tightness. But the long-       term unemployed make up large share of the           overall jobless rate. With diminished job                   opportunities and a greater chance of leaving the     work force all together. The long-term                       unemployed have less influence on wages, meaning   overall unemployment may have been                         less accurate as a predictor for salary increases.

 

Don’t get me wrong, the long-term unemployment and total rate are critical in gauging the overall health of the labor market. But the short-term unemployment drop is a positive sign for wages.

2. Workers are feeling confident enough to quit

The so-called job “quit rate” has hit its highest level in four years, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ August job openings and labor survey.

Workers who start voting with their feet are a good thing for wage appreciation. It signals the labor force feels confident they can quit in to look for new jobs at potentially higher salaries.

3. Labor costs are going up

[pullquote style=”left” quote=”dark”]While the short-term unemployed are finding jobs, many of the long-term unemployed often remain without work, or leave the jobs market altogether, ultimately ending up of causalities of the Great Recession. After five years of relatively high unemployment and wage stagnation, however, these indicators can help keep the U.S. from slipping back into the doldrums of a tough recession as Europe is.[/pullquote]
U.S. employers’ labor costs are on the upswing, and that’s yet another sign that worker pay could finally break out of its post-recession pattern of sluggish growth.

The Employment Cost Index (ECI), a broad gauge of wage and benefit expenditures, rose a seasonally adjusted 0.7% in the second and third quarters as compared to 0.3% in the first quarter. Early on during the recovery much of the overall gain in the ECI was from a jump in benefits, this time wages and salaries, which account for roughly 70% of compensation costs, jumped 0.8%.

All that said, the news on wage growth will not be good for all. While certain jobs require higher and higher salaries, a large number of American workers aren’t seeing any, or very little, wage growth.

If the higher wages do take hold, workers may start spending more, which means businesses will feel more apt to hire, and a positive cycle can ensue.

If this scenario plays out, it may finally be time to walk into your boss’s office and ask: ‘how about that raise?’

 

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