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News
Bureau of Labor Statistics

United States
Department
of Labor
Washington, D.C. 20212

Internet Address: http://www.bls.gov/ces/
Technical information: (202) 691-6555
USDL 07-1243
Media contact:
691-5902
TRANSMISSION OF MATERIAL
IN THIS RELEASE IS EMBARGOED
UNTIL 8:30 AM EDT, WEDNESDAY,
AUGUST 15, 2007
REAL EARNINGS IN JULY 2007
Real average weekly earnings fell by 0.1 percent from June to July after
seasonal adjustment, according to preliminary data released today by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor. A 0.3 percent increase in
average hourly earnings was offset by a 0.3 percent decrease in average weekly
hours and a 0.1 percent increase in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage
Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W).
Data on average weekly earnings are collected from the payroll reports of
private nonfarm establishments. Earnings of both full-time and part-time
workers holding production or nonsupervisory jobs are included. Real average
weekly earnings are calculated by adjusting earnings in current dollars for
changes in the CPI-W.
Average weekly earnings rose by 3.6 percent, seasonally adjusted, from July
2006 to July 2007. After deflation by the CPI-W, average weekly earnings
increased by 1.3 percent. Before adjustment for seasonal change and inflation,
average weekly earnings were $595.76 in July 2007, compared with $572.85 a year
earlier.
_____________________________

Real Earnings for August 2007 will be released on Wednesday, September 19,
2007.

Table A. Composition of change in real earnings of production and
nonsupervisory workers1 on private nonfarm payrolls

Year
and
month

Average
hourly
earnings

Average
weekly
hours

Average
weekly
earnings

The
Consumer
Price
Index 2

Real
average
weekly
earnings

Percent change from preceding month, seasonally adjusted
2006:
July
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
2007:
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
June p
July p

0.4
.3
.2
.4
.3
.5

0.0
-.3
.0
.3
-.3
.3

0.4

.2
.4
.3
.2
.4
.4
.3

-.3
-.3
.6
-.3
.0
.3
-.3

-.1
.1
.9
-.1
.4
.7

( 3)

.2
.7
( 3)

.8

0.5
.3
-.7
-.7
.1
.5

-0.1
-.3
1.0
1.3

.1
.4
.8
.5
.8
.1
.1

-.3
-.3
.1
-.5
-.4
.6
-.1

( 3)

1

See footnote 2, table 1.
The deflator for the constant-dollar
series presented in this release is the
Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage

( 3)

.3

Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W).
3
Change less than 0.05 percent in
magnitude.
p
= preliminary.

2

Table B. Percent change in earnings from the same month a year ago for
production and nonsupervisory workers 1 on private nonfarm payrolls,
seasonally adjusted

Year
and
month

2006:
July
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
2007:
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
June p
July p
1

Average hourly
earnings
Current
dollars

Constant
(1982) dollars 2

Current
dollars

Constant
(1982) dollars 2

3.9
4.1
4.1
3.9
4.2
4.3

-0.5
.1
2.4
3.1
2.5
1.8

4.5
4.4
4.1
4.2
4.2
4.6

0.2
.4
2.3
3.3
2.4
2.1

4.1
4.1
4.0
3.7
4.0
3.9
3.9

2.2
1.8
1.3
1.2
1.1
1.3
1.7

4.1
3.8
4.3
3.4
4.0
3.9
3.6

2.2
1.5
1.6
.9
1.2
1.3
1.3

See footnote 2, table 1.
The deflator for the constant-dollar
series presented in this release is the
Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage
2

Average weekly
earnings

Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W).
3
Change less than 0.05 percent in
magnitude.
p
= preliminary.

Table 1. Earnings of production and nonsupervisory workers on private nonfarm payrolls in current and constant
dollars 1 by industry and selected industry detail, not seasonally adjusted
Average hourly earnings
Industry

July
2006

June
2007p

July
2007p

Total private: 2
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

$16.75
8.15

$17.29
8.22

$17.42
8.29

Goods-producing:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

18.03
8.77

18.65
8.86

Natural resources and mining:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

19.79
9.63

Construction:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

Average weekly earnings
Percent
change:
July 2006July 2007

Percent
change:
July 2006July 2007

July
2006

June
2007p

July
2007p

4.0
1.7

$572.85
278.62

$587.86
279.36

$595.76
283.40

4.0
1.7

18.69
8.89

3.7
1.4

730.22
355.17

764.65
363.38

756.95
360.08

3.7
1.4

20.78
9.88

20.67
9.83

4.4
2.1

906.38
440.85

962.11
457.21

946.69
450.34

4.4
2.2

20.12
9.79

20.89
9.93

20.99
9.98

4.3
1.9

792.73
385.57

829.33
394.11

827.01
393.41

4.3
2.0

Manufacturing:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

16.70
8.12

17.23
8.19

17.22
8.19

3.1
.9

683.03
332.21

715.05
339.81

704.30
335.03

3.1
.8

Private service-providing:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

16.41
7.98

16.93
8.05

17.09
8.13

4.1
1.9

539.89
262.59

550.23
261.48

562.26
267.47

4.1
1.9

Trade, transportation, and utilities:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

15.53
7.55

15.75
7.48

15.87
7.55

2.2
.0

526.47
256.07

529.20
251.49

536.41
255.17

1.9
-.4

Wholesale trade:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

19.07
9.28

19.39
9.21

19.64
9.34

3.0
.6

732.29
356.17

740.70
352.00

758.10
360.63

3.5
1.3

Retail trade:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

12.68
6.17

12.78
6.07

12.83
6.10

1.2
-1.1

393.08
191.19

388.51
184.63

393.88
187.37

.2
-2.0

Transportation and
warehousing:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

17.50
8.51

17.72
8.42

17.87
8.50

2.1
-.1

654.50
318.34

657.41
312.41

670.13
318.78

2.4
.1

Utilities:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

27.43
13.34

27.49
13.06

27.65
13.15

.8
-1.4

1,141.09
555.00

1,171.07
556.52

1,180.66
561.64

3.5
1.2

Information:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

23.15
11.26

23.77
11.30

23.77
11.31

2.7
.4

861.18
418.86

860.47
408.91

881.87
419.50

2.4
.2

Financial activities:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

18.81
9.15

19.54
9.29

19.67
9.36

4.6
2.3

682.80
332.10

699.53
332.43

719.92
342.47

5.4
3.1

Professional and business
services:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

19.24
9.36

19.95
9.48

20.38
9.69

5.9
3.5

671.48
326.60

694.26
329.93

715.34
340.29

6.5
4.2

Education and health services:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

17.42
8.47

17.92
8.52

18.08
8.60

3.8
1.5

571.38
277.91

582.40
276.77

593.02
282.10

3.8
1.5

Leisure and hospitality:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

9.62
4.68

10.27
4.88

10.33
4.91

7.4
4.9

255.89
124.46

265.99
126.40

272.71
129.73

6.6
4.2

Other services:
Current dollars .........................
Constant (1982) dollars ..........

14.66
7.13

15.12
7.19

15.17
7.22

3.5
1.3

457.39
222.47

467.21
222.03

470.27
223.71

2.8
.6

1

The deflator for the constant-dollar series presented in this release
is the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical
Workers (CPI-W).
2
Data relate to production workers in natural resources and mining

and manufacturing, construction workers in construction, and nonsupervisory
workers in the service-providing industries. These groups account for
approximately four-fifths of the total employment on private nonfarm payrolls.
p
= preliminary.

Table 2. Earnings of production and nonsupervisory workers1 on private nonfarm
payrolls, seasonally adjusted

Year
and
month

2006:
July
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
2007:
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
June p
July p
1

Average hourly
earnings

Current
dollars

Constant
(1982) dollars 2

Current
dollars

$16.79
16.84
16.88
16.94
16.99
17.07

$8.17
8.17
8.25
8.34
8.36
8.36

$569.18
569.19
570.54
574.27
574.26
578.67

$277.11
276.31
278.99
282.61
282.47
283.25

17.10
17.16
17.21
17.25
17.32
17.39
17.45

8.36
8.36
8.32
8.30
8.26
8.29
8.31

577.98
578.29
583.42
583.05
585.42
589.52
589.81

282.54
281.61
281.92
280.46
279.35
281.00
280.78

See footnote 2, table 1.
The deflator for the constant-dollar series
presented in this release is the Consumer
2

Average weekly
earnings

Constant
(1982) dollars 2

Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers (CPI-W).
p
= preliminary.

Explanatory Note

The earnings series presented in this release
are derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’
Current Employment Statistics (CES) survey, a
monthly establishment survey of employment, payroll,
and hours. The deflator used for constant-dollar
earnings series presented in this release is derived from
the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers (CPI-W).
For the purpose of the Real Earnings series,
the CPI-W is converted from the base of 1982-84 that
is used in the official, published series to a base of
1982. Thus, the constant dollar average hourly and
weekly earnings series are in 1982 dollars. To avoid
confusion for users, the CPI data presented in Table A
are the official, published CPI-W series. These data
may differ slightly from those used in the real earnings
calculations.
Seasonally adjusted data are used for
estimates of percent change from the same month a
year ago for current and constant average hourly and
weekly earnings that are presented in Table B of this
release. Special techniques are applied to the CES
hours and earnings data in the seasonal adjustment
process to mitigate the effect of certain calendarrelated fluctuations. Thus, over-the-year changes of
these hours and earnings are best measured using
seasonally adjusted series. A discussion of the
calendar-related fluctuations in the hours and earnings
data and the special techniques to remove them is
available in the February 2004 issue of Employment
and Earnings or on the Internet under ‘Technical
Notes’ (http://www.bls.gov/ces/).
Earnings
series
from
the
monthly
establishment series are estimated arithmetic averages
(means) of the hourly and weekly earnings of all
production and nonsupervisory jobs in the private
nonfarm sector of the economy. Average hourly
earnings estimates are derived by dividing the
estimated industry payroll--for all production and
nonsupervisory jobs--by the corresponding paid hours.
Average weekly hours estimates are similarly derived
by dividing estimated aggregate hours by the
corresponding
number
of
production
and
nonsupervisory jobs.
Average weekly earnings
estimates are derived by multiplying the average
hourly earnings and the average weekly hours
estimates. This is equivalent to dividing the estimated
payroll by the number of production and
nonsupervisory jobs. The weekly and hourly earnings
estimates for aggregate industries, such as the major
industry division and the total private

sector averages printed in this release, are derived by
summing the corresponding payroll, hours, and
employment estimates of the component industries.
As a result, each industry receives a "weight" in the
published averages that corresponds to its current level
of activity (employment or total hours). This further
implies that fluctuations and varying trends in
employment in high-wage versus low-wage industries
as well as wage rate changes influence the earnings
averages.
There are several characteristics of the series
presented in this release that limit their suitability for
some types of economic analyses. (1) The denominator
for the weekly earnings series is the number of private
nonfarm production and nonsupervisory worker jobs.
This number includes full-time and part-time jobs as
well as the jobs held by multiple jobholders in the
private nonfarm sector. These factors tend to result in
weekly earnings averages significantly lower than the
corresponding numbers for full-time jobs. (2) Annual
earnings averages can differ significantly from the
result obtained by multiplying average weekly
earnings times 52 weeks. The difference may be due
to factors such as turnovers and layoffs. (3) The series
are the average earnings of all production and
nonsupervisory jobs, not the earnings average of
"typical" jobs or jobs held by "typical" workers.
Specifically, there are no adjustments for occupational,
age, or schooling variations or for household type or
location.
Many studies have established the
significance of these factors and that their impact
varies over time.
Seasonally adjusted data (table 2) are
preferred by some users for analyzing general earnings
trends in the economy since they eliminate the effect of
changes that normally occur at the same time and in
about the same magnitude each year and, therefore,
reveal the underlying trends and cyclical movements.
Changes in average earnings may be due to seasonal
changes in the proportion of workers in high-wage and
low-wage industries or occupations or to seasonal
changes in the amount of overtime work, and so on.
For more information, see Thomas Gavett,
"Measures of Change in Real Wages and Earnings,"
Monthly Labor Review, February 1972.
Information in this release will be made
available to sensory impaired individuals upon request.
Voice phone: 202-691-5200; TDD Message Referral
Phone Number: 1-800-877-8339.