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September ‘Functional Unemployment’ Improves, Q3 Earnings Up, Says Ludwig Institute
Wages rise across the board, but living-wage jobs show uneven growth

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Median weekly earnings jumped 1.9% for the third quarter of 2024 while the September rate of “functional unemployment” dropped by a half percentage point, with encouraging news for most demographic groups, according to a report by the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity (LISEP).

LISEP issued its monthly True Rate of Unemployment (TRU) for September along with the Q3 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). TWE is a measure of median weekly earnings (adjusted for inflation) for all members of the workforce, including part-time workers and the unemployed seeking work. By comparison, the Bureau of Labor Statistics headline numbers only include those who are employed at full-time jobs.

The overall TWE increased by 1.9% in Q3 from $964 to $982 a week. Women saw the strongest gains, increasing 3.3% from $849 to $877. This, combined with a more modest increase by men (0.6%, from $1,099 to $1,106 a week), narrowed the gender pay gap for women to 79.3 cents for every dollar earned by men. TWE for White workers increased by 3.1%, from $1,067 to $1,100 a week, while the TWE for Black workers increased by 1.2%, from $812 to $823. Hispanic workers’ TWE, on the other hand, declined slightly, 0.1% from $791 to $790.

Weekly earnings increased across all earnings distributions. Low-wage workers at the 25th percentile saw a 2% gain, from $601 to $613. Those at the 75th percentile saw a 1.4% increase, from $1,613 to $1,635. The highest earners (90th percentile) saw the most significant growth with an increase of 3.6%, from $2,522 to $2,613 a week. Over the past year, wage growth has been uneven. While wages at the 25th percentile are 0.6% lower, they have increased at the median 0.3%), 75th percentile (1.9%), and 90th percentile (1.6%).

“Even though wages for full-time workers rose considerably year-over-year, the weaker labor market has meant that lower-wage workers have not experienced increases at the same level as higher-wage workers,” said LISEP Chairman Gene Ludwig. “While any earnings increase is positive, it remains concerning that the larger increases have not come to those who need it the most.”

The overall TRU also improved, falling from 24.4% to 23.9% on the gains for Black and White workers. Black workers saw a 1.5 percentage point decrease (from 26.7% to 25.2%), while the TRU for White workers fell 0.3 percentage points, from 23.2% to 22.9%. Hispanic workers, however, saw a rise in functional unemployment, with a TRU increasing 0.7 percentage points, from 27.5% to 28.2%.

Despite a Q3 improvement, the quarterly average TRU remains 0.8 percentage points higher than a year ago (24.3% vs. 23.5%), with all demographic groups experiencing elevated rates.

“Easing inflation and a resilient job market are positive signs for low- and middle-income workers,” Ludwig said. “Rising wages and improving functional employment are encouraging indicators. Longer-term trends, however, indicate we still have some ground to make up to fully recover—but the current trajectory is promising.”

September ‘Functional Unemployment’ Improves, Q3 Earnings Up, Says Ludwig Institute
Wages rise across the board, but living-wage jobs show uneven growth
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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. — Median weekly earnings jumped 1.9% for the third quarter of 2024 while the September rate of “functional unemployment” dropped by a half percentage point, with encouraging news for most demographic groups, according to a report by the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity (LISEP).

LISEP issued its monthly True Rate of Unemployment (TRU) for September along with the Q3 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). TWE is a measure of median weekly earnings (adjusted for inflation) for all members of the workforce, including part-time workers and the unemployed seeking work. By comparison, the Bureau of Labor Statistics headline numbers only include those who are employed at full-time jobs.

The overall TWE increased by 1.9% in Q3 from $964 to $982 a week. Women saw the strongest gains, increasing 3.3% from $849 to $877. This, combined with a more modest increase by men (0.6%, from $1,099 to $1,106 a week), narrowed the gender pay gap for women to 79.3 cents for every dollar earned by men. TWE for White workers increased by 3.1%, from $1,067 to $1,100 a week, while the TWE for Black workers increased by 1.2%, from $812 to $823. Hispanic workers’ TWE, on the other hand, declined slightly, 0.1% from $791 to $790.

Weekly earnings increased across all earnings distributions. Low-wage workers at the 25th percentile saw a 2% gain, from $601 to $613. Those at the 75th percentile saw a 1.4% increase, from $1,613 to $1,635. The highest earners (90th percentile) saw the most significant growth with an increase of 3.6%, from $2,522 to $2,613 a week. Over the past year, wage growth has been uneven. While wages at the 25th percentile are 0.6% lower, they have increased at the median 0.3%), 75th percentile (1.9%), and 90th percentile (1.6%).

“Even though wages for full-time workers rose considerably year-over-year, the weaker labor market has meant that lower-wage workers have not experienced increases at the same level as higher-wage workers,” said LISEP Chairman Gene Ludwig. “While any earnings increase is positive, it remains concerning that the larger increases have not come to those who need it the most.”

The overall TRU also improved, falling from 24.4% to 23.9% on the gains for Black and White workers. Black workers saw a 1.5 percentage point decrease (from 26.7% to 25.2%), while the TRU for White workers fell 0.3 percentage points, from 23.2% to 22.9%. Hispanic workers, however, saw a rise in functional unemployment, with a TRU increasing 0.7 percentage points, from 27.5% to 28.2%.

Despite a Q3 improvement, the quarterly average TRU remains 0.8 percentage points higher than a year ago (24.3% vs. 23.5%), with all demographic groups experiencing elevated rates.

“Easing inflation and a resilient job market are positive signs for low- and middle-income workers,” Ludwig said. “Rising wages and improving functional employment are encouraging indicators. Longer-term trends, however, indicate we still have some ground to make up to fully recover—but the current trajectory is promising.”

Notes
‍Jim Gardner
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