This Great Graphic caught my eye. It was tweeted by Ninja Economics. Her point was about immigration. German had much higher immigration than the UK, but also saw real wage increase of nearly 14% in the 2007-2015 period, while real wages in the UK fell nearly 10.5%. She noted that Greece is the only developed country where real wages have collapsed as much as in the UK. This is amazing, and not because of immigration. Rather, since 2010 the Greek economy has collapsed by more than a quarter, while UK economy is somewhat bigger than it was in 2007. Moreover, by many economists’ reckoning, the UK alongside Germany, Japan, and the US are near or approaching full employment. At the demand of its official creditors, Greece has had to cut wages and benefits, On top of that Greece has been in deflation since the end of 2013. There is a bright spot that ought not be lost. The stronger real wage increases in Germany may speak to a slowly changing competitive landscape within the eurozone. The stronger real wage increases in Germany likely mean higher unit labor costs (wages, benefits, and productivity) and is one way that the periphery of Europe can narrow the gap with Germany. What is also evident in the chart, though not the subject of the tweet, is the competitiveness of the US.
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Marc Chandler considers the following as important: Featured, FX Trends, Great Graphic, newslettersent, wages
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This Great Graphic caught my eye. It was tweeted by Ninja Economics. Her point was about immigration. German had much higher immigration than the UK, but also saw real wage increase of nearly 14% in the 2007-2015 period, while real wages in the UK fell nearly 10.5%.
She noted that Greece is the only developed country where real wages have collapsed as much as in the UK. This is amazing, and not because of immigration. Rather, since 2010 the Greek economy has collapsed by more than a quarter, while UK economy is somewhat bigger than it was in 2007. Moreover, by many economists’ reckoning, the UK alongside Germany, Japan, and the US are near or approaching full employment. At the demand of its official creditors, Greece has had to cut wages and benefits, On top of that Greece has been in deflation since the end of 2013. There is a bright spot that ought not be lost. The stronger real wage increases in Germany may speak to a slowly changing competitive landscape within the eurozone. The stronger real wage increases in Germany likely mean higher unit labor costs (wages, benefits, and productivity) and is one way that the periphery of Europe can narrow the gap with Germany. What is also evident in the chart, though not the subject of the tweet, is the competitiveness of the US. Real wage growth in the US has been a little below the OECD average, while Germany is twice the average. |
Real Wages 2007 - 2015 |
Tags: Featured,Great Graphic,newslettersent,wages