The Great Catch-Up: Why Wages Are Set to Rise for Good

 | May 25, 2023 03:33AM ET

Blowback has its own dynamics, as we'll learn in the decade ahead.

One of the most durable expectations in the financial sphere is that inflation will drop sharply in a recession, and the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates back to near zero. There is a good reason to doubt this: rising wages. Yes, we all hear about the millions of human workers who will shortly be replaced by AI - wonderful for corporate profits! - but few pundits bother looking at long cycles in interest rates and inflation, and even fewer pay any attention to the absurdly extreme asymmetry of labor and capital.

As I've often noted here, labor's share of the economy has fallen for 45 years. Only recently did it reverse slightly. It's not yet clear if this was a brief false breakout or a change in trend, but there are good reasons to expect a secular, cyclical reversal that lasts years or even a decade.

In other words, a decade in which labor/wages gain at the expense of capital.

There are two basic narratives that are offered as explanations for how capital siphoned $50 trillion from labor over the last 45 years. One is that the macro-forces of globalization and financialization inherently favor capital and reduce labor's leverage as production and jobs are offshored. US workers entered a race-to-the-bottom competition with developing nations' low-cost workforces--a competition that kept US wages stagnant even as US corporate profits and financial assets soared.

The other narrative starts with the observation that the erosion of wages and the glorification of corporate power was the direct result of specific policies being adopted. The dominance of corporate interests and the strip-mining of labor were anything but inevitable: it was engineered by policies that enriched the top 0.01% (the Financial Aristocracy) and the top 10% who own 90% of America's productive capital.

This wholesale transfer of wealth and income from workers to Capital was documented by a RAND Corporation report, Trends in Income From 1975 to 2018. Time magazine summarized the findings: The Top 1% of Americans Have Taken $50 Trillion From the Bottom 90% -- And That's Made the U.S. Less Secure.

(We're told the stagnating wages of the past 45 years) were the unfortunate but necessary price of keeping American businesses competitive in an increasingly cutthroat global market. But in fact, the $50 trillion transfer of wealth the RAND report documents has occurred entirely within the American economy, not between it and its trading partners. No, this upward redistribution of income, wealth, and power wasn't inevitable; it was a political choice--a direct result of the trickle-down policies we chose to implement since 1981.

The net result of this four-decade siphoning of wealth/income from workers was documented by a Foreign Affairs article: Monopoly Versus Democracy:

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Ten percent of Americans now control 97 percent of all capital income in the country. Nearly half of the new income generated since the global financial crisis of 2008 has gone to the wealthiest one percent of U.S. citizens. The richest three Americans collectively have more wealth than the poorest 160 million Americans.

In other words, the bottom 90% have very little stake in the status quo: they receive essentially zero income from America's stupendous $140 trillion hoard of private wealth and have essentially zero political influence, as documented in Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens.

We can see these realities in the data /charts. As the charts below (courtesy of the Federal Reserve FRED database) show, wages' share topped out in the early 1970s and trended down for 45 years. Corporate profits skyrocketed 15.7-fold since 1982, while inflation rose "only" 3-fold.