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Pandemic Wage Pressures

Gianluca Benigno and Serra Pelin

No 20220804, Liberty Street Economics from Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Abstract: The recovery since the onset of the pandemic has been characterized by a tight labor market and rising nominal wage growth. In this post, we look at labor market conditions from a more granular, sectoral point of view focusing on data covering the nine major industries. This breakdown is motivated by the exceptionality of the pandemic episode, the way it has asymmetrically affected sectors of the economy, and by the possibility of exploiting sectoral heterogeneities to understand the drivers of recent labor market dynamics. We document that wage pressures are highest in the sectors with the largest employment shortfall relative to their pre-pandemic trend path, but that other factors explain most of the wage growth differentials. We suggest that one key factor is the extent of physical contact that has had to be compensated for by offering higher wages. One implication of our analysis is that, as COVID-related factors recede, sectoral imbalances could be restored from the supply side as employment recovers back toward the pre-pandemic trend.

Keywords: wage inflation; labor market employment; labor market tightness; COVID-19; pandemic; inflation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: E2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022-08-04
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