Very Small Catch-up for Wages, But Uneven Gains
Very Small Catch-up for Wages, But Uneven
Gains
“The 2.0 percent increase in wage
levels for the year to March seen in the Labour Cost Index
statistics released today, shows some wage and salary
earners are getting a modest catch-up when compared to the
1.6 rise in CPI, after high inflation last year”, says CTU
economist Bill Rosenberg.
“However, rises are
slowing, 0.4 percent in the quarter compared to 0.5 percent
last quarter and 0.6 percent the two quarters before. The
increases are below forecasters’ expectations, and not all
New Zealanders are sharing in it equally. Higher income
earners got higher rises, particularly in the private
sector. There is a growing difference between private sector
and central government pay increases, and paid hours and
part-time employment have fallen in some industries
according to Statistics New Zealand.”
“Many
New Zealanders have been voting with their feet, with the
highest ever migration to Australia in the last
year.”
There is a growing difference in the
private sector between the median increase of 3.0 percent
(half of those receiving an increase got less than this) and
the average increase of 4.0 percent which is weighted
towards higher incomes.
In the last three months,
the median increase for private sector employees who got a
pay rise was 3.1 percent, while it was only 2.0 percent in
central government.
“Without more substantial
and consistent increases in wage rates, the move to
Australia will continue and demand for local goods and
services will continue to be weak,” says Rosenberg
“neither is good for the
economy.”
ENDS