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Earnings Up for Q2 as June ‘Functional Unemployment’ Declines, Says Ludwig Institute
Overall improvement for Black, Hispanic workers; gender pay gap widens

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Overall labor market indicators point to improvements for middle- and lower-income workers, with “functional unemployment rates” declining and earnings rising for key demographics, according to a report by the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity (LISEP). But the report also reveals gains are unevenly distributed, with women in the workforce losing ground for the second consecutive quarter, resulting in the widest gender pay gap in two years.

LISEP issued its monthly True Rate of Unemployment (TRU) for June in conjunction with the Q2 2024 True Weekly Earnings (TWE) report. TRU is a measure of the “functionally unemployed” — defined as the jobless plus those seeking, but unable to find, full-time employment paying above poverty wages (pegged at $25,000 a year in 2024 dollars), while TWE is a measure of median weekly earnings (after adjusting for inflation) for all members of the workforce. This includes part-time workers and the jobless who are seeking work. By comparison, the Bureau of Labor Statistics headline numbers only include those who are employed at full-time jobs.

The TWE rose $3 a week in Q2, from $958 to $961 — but it remains 2% lower than its Q4 2023 levels ($20/week). Black workers experienced the most significant quarter-over-quarter growth at 3.1%, rising to $810, a $24/week increase — but their earnings remain 2.9% below Q4 2023 levels. Hispanic workers also saw gains, with earnings up 2.8% ($22/week) to $788. White workers lost ground, dropping 1.5% ($16/week) to $1,064.

Meanwhile, women’s earnings declined for the second consecutive quarter, dropping 1.4% ($12/week) to $846, while men saw a 0.9% increase ($10/week) to $1,096. This disparity equates to women earning 77 cents for every dollar earned by men — resulting in the widest gender pay gap since 2022. Low-wage workers also experienced a setback, with earnings for the bottom quartile falling 0.1% to $599, declining for the third consecutive quarter.

“While median wage growth is encouraging, a closer examination reveals some alarming trends,” said LISEP Chairman Gene Ludwig. “Even though Black and Hispanic workers experienced wage gains, these increases were not sufficient to close the persistent income gap. Moreover, women and low-wage workers face declining earnings. Overall improvement does little for those who continue to lose ground in an otherwise strong economy.”

The overall TRU also improved in June, falling 0.1 percentage points to 24.5%, primarily due to easing pricing pressures. Black and Hispanic workers experienced TRU decreases of 1.2 and 2.1 percentage points, respectively, to 26.9% and 26.8%. The TRU for White workers rose 1.1 percentage points, to 23.8%. But unlike the TWE, the TRU for men increased 0.3 percentage points to 20.2%, while the rate for women improved, dropping 0.5 percentage points, to 29.4% — largely driven by a rising labor force participation rate for men and a declining participation rate for women. This month’s slight improvement diverges from the TRU’s rising trajectory since the beginning of the year.

“While we would like to see a silver lining in even modest improvements, more sustained progress needs to be made to reverse the worsening economic picture faced by low- and middle-income workers over the last year,” Ludwig said. “If we are to right the ship, we need a wholesale shift in how we manage the economy. And that begins with policymakers focusing economic stimulus efforts on those individuals, and communities, that need it the most.”

Correction: July 30, 2024

A previous version of this press release stated that Hispanic workers experienced a 2.9% gain ($12/week). Hispanic workers experienced a 2.8% gain ($22/week).

Earnings Up for Q2 as June ‘Functional Unemployment’ Declines, Says Ludwig Institute
Overall improvement for Black, Hispanic workers; gender pay gap widens
Historically, systemic barriers have disproportionately hampered Black farmers’ ability to retain land ownership.
Despite this tragic history, there is still time and economic incentive to set some of the inequities right.
In 2021, working mothers with children under 18 earned just 61.7 cents for every dollar a father made. Much wider than the overall gender wage gap, this difference highlights both the motherhood penalty and the fatherhood premium.
Female-dominated, low-paying, part-time occupations are overrepresented among informal workers who also have a formal job.
We need to create an economic environment where companies can hire these workers as employees and pay them a living wage. There are steps policymakers can take to change the gig economy dynamic.
Dependency on tips over base pay is growing because of actions taken by gig companies to institute tipping.
Even for those lucky enough to be making what amounts in many states to the poverty wage of $15 per hour, many will get nothing but a week’s notice before being out on the street.
One study shows that consistent involvement in extracurricular activities increased a child’s likelihood of attending college by a whopping 400% compared to not being involved at all.
Studies have found that both men and women are paid less if they work in “nurturant” occupations.
Since 2015, the correlation between LISEP’s functional employment to population ratio and the inflation rate was more than four times as strong as the BLS’s employment to population ratio, which is depicted in the graph below.
The employment to population ratio settles the discrepancy between what we see around us and what the data says.
The NBER paper defines employment using the traditional BLS U-3 rate. However, the often-used U-3 number fails to capture the quality of jobs.
Among states with stricter COVID-19 policies, reducing unemployment benefits had little to no effect. The average effect of increased employment seems to have occurred only in those states with looser COVID protocols.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Overall labor market indicators point to improvements for middle- and lower-income workers, with “functional unemployment rates” declining and earnings rising for key demographics, according to a report by the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity (LISEP). But the report also reveals gains are unevenly distributed, with women in the workforce losing ground for the second consecutive quarter, resulting in the widest gender pay gap in two years.

LISEP issued its monthly True Rate of Unemployment (TRU) for June in conjunction with the Q2 2024 True Weekly Earnings (TWE) report. TRU is a measure of the “functionally unemployed” — defined as the jobless plus those seeking, but unable to find, full-time employment paying above poverty wages (pegged at $25,000 a year in 2024 dollars), while TWE is a measure of median weekly earnings (after adjusting for inflation) for all members of the workforce. This includes part-time workers and the jobless who are seeking work. By comparison, the Bureau of Labor Statistics headline numbers only include those who are employed at full-time jobs.

The TWE rose $3 a week in Q2, from $958 to $961 — but it remains 2% lower than its Q4 2023 levels ($20/week). Black workers experienced the most significant quarter-over-quarter growth at 3.1%, rising to $810, a $24/week increase — but their earnings remain 2.9% below Q4 2023 levels. Hispanic workers also saw gains, with earnings up 2.8% ($22/week) to $788. White workers lost ground, dropping 1.5% ($16/week) to $1,064.

Meanwhile, women’s earnings declined for the second consecutive quarter, dropping 1.4% ($12/week) to $846, while men saw a 0.9% increase ($10/week) to $1,096. This disparity equates to women earning 77 cents for every dollar earned by men — resulting in the widest gender pay gap since 2022. Low-wage workers also experienced a setback, with earnings for the bottom quartile falling 0.1% to $599, declining for the third consecutive quarter.

“While median wage growth is encouraging, a closer examination reveals some alarming trends,” said LISEP Chairman Gene Ludwig. “Even though Black and Hispanic workers experienced wage gains, these increases were not sufficient to close the persistent income gap. Moreover, women and low-wage workers face declining earnings. Overall improvement does little for those who continue to lose ground in an otherwise strong economy.”

The overall TRU also improved in June, falling 0.1 percentage points to 24.5%, primarily due to easing pricing pressures. Black and Hispanic workers experienced TRU decreases of 1.2 and 2.1 percentage points, respectively, to 26.9% and 26.8%. The TRU for White workers rose 1.1 percentage points, to 23.8%. But unlike the TWE, the TRU for men increased 0.3 percentage points to 20.2%, while the rate for women improved, dropping 0.5 percentage points, to 29.4% — largely driven by a rising labor force participation rate for men and a declining participation rate for women. This month’s slight improvement diverges from the TRU’s rising trajectory since the beginning of the year.

“While we would like to see a silver lining in even modest improvements, more sustained progress needs to be made to reverse the worsening economic picture faced by low- and middle-income workers over the last year,” Ludwig said. “If we are to right the ship, we need a wholesale shift in how we manage the economy. And that begins with policymakers focusing economic stimulus efforts on those individuals, and communities, that need it the most.”

Correction: July 30, 2024

A previous version of this press release stated that Hispanic workers experienced a 2.9% gain ($12/week). Hispanic workers experienced a 2.8% gain ($22/week).

Notes
‍Jim Gardner
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