Wage Growth Stalls for Low-Income Workers After Years-Long Boom

Data Suggests a Boon for Disbursements, Earned Wage Access

After years of rapid wage growth for low-income workers in the United States, a slowdown has set in, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday (Aug. 11).

    Get the Full Story

    Complete the form to unlock this article and enjoy unlimited free access to all PYMNTS content — no additional logins required.

    yesSubscribe to our daily newsletter, PYMNTS Today.

    By completing this form, you agree to receive marketing communications from PYMNTS and to the sharing of your information with our sponsor, if applicable, in accordance with our Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.

    According to the latest government jobs report, average earnings for workers in the leisure/hospitality space rose 3.5% year over year, to $22.83 per hour, the report said. The average earnings for workers in the information sector increased 5.4%, to $52.61 per hour.

    That’s a shift from December 2021, when leisure/hospitality workers — the lowest paid workers in the groups tracked by the Department of Labor — were up 14%, per the report. Meanwhile, well-paid information sector workers saw their wages go up by less than 2% during the same month.

    The pandemic played a part in wage growth for low-paid workers, the report said. When the shutdown began, employers cut swaths of workers at hotels, restaurants and retail stores. When those businesses reopened, they had a demand for staff, letting workers in low-wage roles command better pay.

    That trend seems to be over. Data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta showed that wage growth for the lowest-paid quarter of U.S. workers — people earning roughly less than $806 each week — slowed to an annual rate of 3.7% in June.

    That’s down from a peak of 7.5% in late 2022, a time of severe post-pandemic labor shortages in industries like hospitality.

    Advertisement: Scroll to Continue

    Wage growth has also slowed for high-paid workers, although not as much, the central bank found. Wages for the top quarter of U.S. workers — people taking home $1,887 a week — climbed 4.7% in the year to June, and for the overall workforce by 4.3%.

    Precarious financial situations continue to be the norm for many U.S. consumers, according to the PYMNTS Intelligence report “Consumers Say They Want Budgeting Tools but Aren’t Using Them.”

    The Paycheck-to-Paycheck Index hit a new high of 68.4% in May, showing 684 out of every 1,000 consumers spending their monthly income on essential payments, with nearly a quarter saying they struggled to pay their bills.

    Further PYMNTS Intelligence research showed a gender gap in how paycheck-to-paycheck consumers manage their monthly finances. When asked if they could stop living paycheck to paycheck if their earnings remained flat but their spending changed, nearly a third of men said “absolutely,” while fewer than 20% of women said the same.