Advertising

Originally published Wednesday, November 4, 2009 at 12:09 AM

Comments      E-mail E-mail article      Print Print view      Share Share

Wages down in wealthy nations

Real wages fell in the United States and some other wealthy nations in the second quarter of the year, raising questions about whether workers are sharing in any economic recovery, the U.N. labor agency said Tuesday.

The Associated Press

GENEVA — Real wages fell in the United States and some other wealthy nations in the second quarter of the year, raising questions about whether workers are sharing in any economic recovery, the U.N. labor agency said Tuesday.

The International Labor Organization said inflation-adjusted wage growth fell sharply around the world last year to 1.4 percent, from 4.3 percent in 2007. It said wages are falling in a number of countries so far this year.

"The picture on wages is likely to get worse in 2009, despite the beginning of a possible economic recovery," the 15-page report said.

The ILO analyzed data from 35 countries including Brazil, Britain, Japan, South Africa and Ukraine. It did not specify where wages have fallen the most or the least, and China and India, which provide large amounts of the world's workers, were excluded from the report because they did not provide data.

Monthly wages have fallen almost 2 percent in the United States since January, said Patrick Belser, an ILO economist.

Manuela Tomei, ILO's employment chief, said wage declines were depriving national economies of much-needed demand and were contributing to sapping consumer confidence.

"The continued deterioration of real wages worldwide raises serious questions about the true extent of an economic recovery, especially if government rescue packages are phased out too early," Tomei said.

The ILO noted some good efforts by governments to help workers, citing minimum-wage increases above inflation in the United States, Brazil, Japan and Russia.

"In the U.S., there is a real policy toward strengthening the wage policies," Belser said, adding that Washington was trying to make it easier for workers to join unions.

E-mail E-mail article      Print Print view      Share Share

More Nation & World

More Nation & World headlines...

advertising


Get home delivery today!

Advertising

AP Video

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech

Advertising