Interesting. I know the majority here in Canada have not experienced wage growth which keeps pace with inflation in the sense that inflation excludes the most volatile goods (eg fresh foods, gas, etc). Housing, for example, which should not be increasing faster than inflation has sky rocketed here. I can’t speak to the situation in the US.Well actually earnings increases pretty much are correlated with inflation. Also inflation here being discussed is US inflation thus should correlate that to US wage growth. Historically since 1951 Wage growth has outpaced inflation
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Looking at the annual growths you see very few times inflation outpaced wage growth. Any time inflation outpaces wage growth for extended periods of time there will be large macroeconomic issues and if it continues consistently you have situations like Venezuela.
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Since you suggested the last 10 years here is looking at a comparison from 2007 (peak market before crash) until 2017. You see them pretty much in lock step. So overall the past 10 years has shown we can expect wage growth (median is used here which is a better measure for middle class) and inflation to be similar.
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Median Wage (From Social Security Admin)
https://www.ssa.gov/oact/cola/AWI.html
CPI (Measure of Inflation for US)
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CPIAUCSL
ETA. You also can’t expect wage growth to continue in perpetuity in the same manner as it has through the expansionary phase of the cycle. That’s recency bias.
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