Wages in U.S. down 23 percent since 2008, report shows

Cliff Pinckard
cleveland.com
August 12, 2014

While 8.7 million jobs have been regained since the 2008 recession, they are paying much less, by an average of 23 percent, according to a report released Monday by the United States Conference of Mayors.

The report comes as debate continues about income inequality in the United States.

“While the economy is picking up steam, income inequality and wage gaps are an alarming trend that must be addressed,” said Conference of Mayors President Kevin Johnson, the mayor of Sacramento, Calif., in a news release. “We cannot put our heads in the sand on these issues.”

The annual wage in sectors where jobs were lost, particularly in manufacturing and construction, during the recession was $61,637, but the average wage of new jobs through the second quarter of 2014 is $47,131, the report shows.

It represents a loss of $93 billion in wages, according to the report. (See the full report here.)

The losses in construction and manufacturing were replaced by jobs in hospitality, health-care and administrative support.

The report shows the gap between low- and higher-income households is growing and likely will continue in the future. In 2012, the latest year for which figures are available, 73 percent of metro areas had a larger share of poorer households (those making less than $35,000 per year) than upper-income households of above $75,000.

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What better remedy than to have blanket amnesty? Obviously our thriving and burgeoning economy can provide for all no? Why not send for all the poor across the other hemisphere while were at it? And to think that some idiot lamestream media outlets were just reporting we have “turned a corner”

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