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In reply to the discussion: Very few others are saying it, so I will. Congratulations, Mr. President. [View all]progree
(13,090 posts)29. Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers show it keeping up with inflation
Last edited Thu Jul 3, 2014, 06:55 PM - Edit history (3)
This shows that the average hourly earnings of production and nonsupervisory employees, in 1982-1984, meaning these are inflation-adjusted numbers, increased from 8.23 $/hour from Jan 1984 to 8.81 $/hour in May 2014 (again, both numbers are expressed in constant 1982-1984 dollars). So its keeping up with inflation, even exceeding inflation a little bit, but just barely.
http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CES0500000032
Here's the raw (non-inflation adjusted) numbers
http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CES0500000008
the raw numbers increased from 8.38 $/hour from Jan 1984 to 20.58 $/hour in June 2014
according to the BLS anyway.
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Very few others are saying it, so I will. Congratulations, Mr. President. [View all]
Nye Bevan
Jul 2014
OP
The ADP number yesterday (which is calculated completely independently) was also great.
Nye Bevan
Jul 2014
#3
"unemployment rate ... they drop several categories, like long term unemployed people" - Not true
progree
Jul 2014
#17
it's a frivolous alert, and I'm glad the post stood because it gave people a chance to refute
magical thyme
Jul 2014
#46
I think lack of healthcare has been one of the things that puts the "floor" at about 5%
bhikkhu
Jul 2014
#49
If you look over a longer period, like a year, just 9.1% of new jobs were part time
progree
Jul 2014
#24
And the pay scale is about what it was 30 years ago with today's cost of living.
hobbit709
Jul 2014
#28
Yup, I hear you. The BLS numbers, even for "production and non-supervisory employees" are, well,
progree
Jul 2014
#41