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February 23, 2017

More Ways to Watch Wages

The Atlanta Fed's Wage Growth Tracker slipped to 3.2 percent in January from 3.5 percent in December. The Wage Growth Tracker
for women was 3.1 percent in January, down significantly from what we saw in late 2016, when gains topped 4 percent. For men, the
January reading was 3.4 percent, very close to its average for the past 12 months. As I noted last month, I did not think the unusually
high female wage growth was sustainable, and that proved to be the case. Since 2009, the Wage Growth Tracker for women has
averaged about 0.3 percentage points below that for men—the same as the gap in the latest data.
Understanding why the Wage Growth Tracker slowed last month highlights the importance of being able to look beyond the top-line
number. To provide Wage Growth Tracker users with more information, we have now added several additional cuts of the data to the
Wage Growth Tracker web page. The amount of detail we can provide is limited by sample size considerations, and as a result, the
additional data are reported as 12-month moving averages. The new data provide more detailed age, race, education, and
geographic comparisons, as well as comparisons across broad categories of occupation, industry, and hours worked. As an
example, here is a look at the (12-month average) median wage growth data for those who usually work full-time versus those who
usually work part-time.

Have fun with these new tools, and we encourage you to comment and let us know what you think.

John Robertson, a senior policy adviser in the Atlanta Fed's research department

May 22, 2017 in Forecasts, GDP | Permalink

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