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More Ways to Look at Wages and Inflation

Monday, February 13, 2023

Wages are on the rise, but so is inflation. Are they connected? To help understand the relationship, BLS recently expanded the availability of inflation-adjusted wage data available from the Employment Cost Index (ECI). Before we go any further, let’s look at some numbers. From December 2021 to December 2022, employer wage costs in private industry increased 5.1 percent. But adjusting for inflation, employer costs for wages fell by 1.2 percent. These inflation-adjusted data are now readily available in the quarterly ECI news release, in the BLS public database, and in new supplemental files.

What is the ECI?

The ECI measures the change in the hourly labor cost to employers, independent of the influence of employment shifts among occupations and industries. Labor costs include wages and salaries and the cost of employee benefits. Costs represent the pay period that includes the 12th of March, June, September, and December. We publish the data on the last business day of the subsequent month.

Wages and salaries are defined as regular payments from employer to employee as compensation for services performed during a specific period. This definition also includes incentive-based pay (such as commissions, production bonuses, and piece rates), cost-of-living allowances, hazard pay, payments of income deferred due to participation in a salary reduction plan, and deadhead pay, or pay given to transportation workers returning in a vehicle without freight or passengers.

A unique aspect of the ECI is that it tracks the cost of employing a fixed set of occupations over time. Much like the BLS Consumer Price Index (CPI) measures the change in the cost to consumers of a fixed basket of goods and services, you can think of the ECI as measuring the change in the cost of compensation for a fixed mix of workers. Changes in the composition of the labor force, such as a move toward lower-paying industries or occupations, do not affect the ECI. As such, the ECI is often considered a true measure of wage inflation.

We gather ECI data through the National Compensation Survey. It is an establishment-based and nationally representative survey that captures data on pay and benefits for a representative group of jobs from a sample of employers. The survey includes private industry and state and local government establishments from across the nation.

Nominal and real wage change

Since we first published the data in the mid-1970s, the headline ECI numbers always focused on nominal change in employer costs—that is, without any adjustment for inflation. Over time, these nominal changes have shown some wild swings, with annual changes in private sector wages above 9 percent in the early 1980s, and typically in the 1–3 percent range throughout the 2010s.

We also have had inflation-adjusted data available, although we didn’t previously highlight the numbers in the quarterly news release. The constant-dollar ECI, or real wage change, could move from negative to positive, based on changes in the CPI. For example, those 9+ percent annual changes in the nominal ECI in the early 1980s, when adjusted for inflation, resulted in a nearly 5-percent annual decline in real wages. More often, the constant-dollar ECI reported annual changes in the range of plus or minus 2 percent.

With recent increases in the CPI nearing 40-year highs, there’s more interest in whether wage growth is keeping up with inflation. Thus, we have expanded the availability of constant-dollar ECI data. The ECI uses the Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U), U.S. city average, to adjust for inflation. The process involves rebasing the CPI to match the ECI base period of December 2005. (The published CPI is currently based in the 36-month period from 1982 to 1984.) The following chart shows the nominal and real ECI, plus the CPI, with both the CPI and the nominal ECI equal to 100 in December 2005.

Editor’s note: Data for this chart are available in the table below.

From 2005 through 2013, the rebased CPI roughly matched the index level seen in the nominal ECI. As such, the ECI measure for real wages remained relatively flat, with an average level of 99.9. This basically means wages kept up with inflation. By the end of 2014 the CPI shifted down, mainly due to lower gasoline prices, while the nominal ECI continued to trend upward. From that point forward, the real ECI index began to trend above the base level as wages outpaced inflation. In March 2021, real wages for private industry workers were 7.3 percent higher than in March 2005.

In June 2021, the gap between nominal wages and the CPI began to decrease. The CPI saw the largest 12-month percent change since August 2008, and such elevated levels continued in the following months. The nominal ECI was also seeing record-breaking movement. In June 2021, wages and salaries for private industry workers in nominal dollars increased 3.5 percent since June 2020. This was the largest year-over-year increase since 3.6 percent in March 2007.

As the economy began to open back up after shutdowns from the COVID-19 pandemic, employers struggled to fill positions and retain workers. Employers reported using higher wages to hire more workers and reduce turnover. However, the CPI increased at a faster rate than nominal wages. Consequently, the real wage index began to trend downwards. In March 2022, real wages for private industry workers were 3.8 percent higher than in March 2005, but 3.3 percent lower than in March 2021.

Want to know more?

You can continue to track both the nominal and real ECI data as they are released each quarter. And you can study related data from the National Compensation Survey, including Employer Costs for Employee Compensation, and Benefits publications.

Employment Cost Index for private industry wages and salaries, current and constant dollars, and Consumer Price Index, 2005–22
Month Rebased CPI Nominal ECI (current dollar) Real ECI (constant dollar)

Mar 2005

98.2 98.3 100.1

Jun 2005

98.8 98.9 100.1

Sep 2005

101.0 99.5 98.5

Dec 2005

100.0 100.0 100.0

Mar 2006

101.5 100.7 99.2

Jun 2006

103.1 101.7 98.6

Sep 2006

103.1 102.5 99.5

Dec 2006

102.5 103.2 100.6

Mar 2007

104.3 104.3 99.9

Jun 2007

105.9 105.1 99.3

Sep 2007

105.9 106.0 100.0

Dec 2007

106.7 106.6 99.9

Mar 2008

108.5 107.6 99.1

Jun 2008

111.2 108.4 97.5

Sep 2008

111.2 109.1 98.2

Dec 2008

106.8 109.4 102.4

Mar 2009

108.1 109.8 101.6

Jun 2009

109.6 110.1 100.5

Sep 2009

109.7 110.6 100.7

Dec 2009

109.7 110.8 101.0

Mar 2010

110.6 111.4 100.7

Jun 2010

110.8 111.9 101.1

Sep 2010

111.0 112.4 101.3

Dec 2010

111.4 112.8 101.2

Mar 2011

113.6 113.2 99.7

Jun 2011

114.7 113.8 99.2

Sep 2011

115.3 114.3 99.1

Dec 2011

114.7 114.6 99.9

Mar 2012

116.6 115.3 98.9

Jun 2012

116.6 115.9 99.4

Sep 2012

117.6 116.4 99.0

Dec 2012

116.7 116.6 100.0

Mar 2013

118.3 117.3 99.2

Jun 2013

118.7 118.1 99.5

Sep 2013

119.0 118.5 99.6

Dec 2013

118.4 119.0 100.5

Mar 2014

120.1 119.3 99.4

Jun 2014

121.1 120.3 99.4

Sep 2014

121.0 121.2 100.2

Dec 2014

119.3 121.6 101.9

Mar 2015

120.0 122.6 102.2

Jun 2015

121.3 122.9 101.4

Sep 2015

120.9 123.7 102.3

Dec 2015

120.2 124.2 103.3

Mar 2016

121.0 125.1 103.4

Jun 2016

122.5 126.1 103.0

Sep 2016

122.7 126.7 103.3

Dec 2016

122.7 127.1 103.6

Mar 2017

123.9 128.3 103.5

Jun 2017

124.5 129.1 103.7

Sep 2017

125.4 130.0 103.7

Dec 2017

125.3 130.6 104.2

Mar 2018

126.8 132.0 104.1

Jun 2018

128.0 132.9 103.8

Sep 2018

128.3 134.0 104.5

Dec 2018

127.7 134.7 105.5

Mar 2019

129.2 135.9 105.2

Jun 2019

130.2 136.9 105.2

Sep 2019

130.5 138.0 105.8

Dec 2019

130.6 138.7 106.2

Mar 2020

131.2 140.4 107.0

Jun 2020

131.0 140.9 107.6

Sep 2020

132.3 141.7 107.1

Dec 2020

132.4 142.6 107.8

Mar 2021

134.6 144.6 107.4

Jun 2021

138.1 145.9 105.7

Sep 2021

139.4 148.2 106.3

Dec 2021

141.7 149.7 105.7

Mar 2022

146.1 151.8 103.9

Jun 2022

150.6 154.2 102.4

Sep 2022

150.8 155.9 103.4

Dec 2022

150.8 157.4 104.4