Menu Close

Here’s Why B of A’s Chart of Fast Growing Low Wages Is BS

Average Weekly Earnings (Nominal)- Click to enlarge

Good guy Sam Ro, now at Yahoo, tweeted out a chart by Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAML) this morning showing that low wage job gains have outpaced gains in high wage jobs.I happen to keep charts on wage growth by industry, so I know a little about the subject. I had my usual calm and measured response.

Here’s that chart again, plus another showing the changes in nominal terms.

Average Real Weekly Earnings - Click to enlarge

Click here to view chart if reading in email.

Average Weekly Earnings (Nominal)- Click to enlarge

Click here to view chart if reading in email.

As I always stress, charting data is a matter of perspective. If low wage jobs are showing material gains versus high wage jobs, it’s not apparent in the big picture. I know how BAML tortured the numbers to come up with their conclusion. They featured rate of change. Minimum wage boosts in many states and localities over the past couple of years make it seem that low wage workers are catching up. Prior to mid 2013 there was no difference in gains between the top 80% and the bottom 20%. The total size of the low paid workers gains is minuscule, and invisible when placed on the same total wage scale with other industries.

The idea that low wage workers are outpacing high wage workers is a scam.

And what’s the point of this argument? How do low wage jobs matter to investors? Low wage workers are merely your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to make a buck. Have they made any real progress to being any more than the flotsam and jetsam of a throwaway society?

Please.

Yes, wages at the lowest end of the spectrum have risen thanks the minimum wage increases over the past couple of years. Once this wave is past, then what? Is there any reason to believe that these sectors will do any better than the long-term trends?

I don’t think so.

I went into a McDonald’s yesterday with our granddaughter. It’s been a year or so since the last time I was at a McDO, as they call them here in Quebec where I spend the summer. I can’t remember the last time I was in one at home in FL. Nevertheless, the stores have always seemed pretty consistent between Canada and the US.

In this busy store in a small town in rural Quebec, where tens of thousands of breadwinner jobs have been lost as major industrial employers have left town over the years, 3/4 of the cashiers have recently been replaced by computer screens that take your order and your payment.

Low skill, low pay jobs are going the way of the dodo bird. Medium and high skill manufacturing jobs with good pay have been shipped overseas for decades. And US companies are replacing American high skilled technicians with cheaper imported workers who are brought in under the H1B visa program. .

Our society has figured out no way, nor shown any will, to counter these trends. The result has been that the US middle class has been both shrinking and losing purchasing power. The consumerist foundation of the US economy is being hollowed out, driven by central bank financial repression and financialization that benefits only the few.

This is what a society in terminal decline looks like. Meanwhile the financial markets party on as those at the top enjoy a false prosperity, thanks to the Fed’s policy of robbing hard-working savers to transfer income to speculators and banks. These policies shock the conscience. The result of such shortsighted stupidity and immorality may be a long time coming, but it will not be pretty.

I weep for America.

Liquidity drives markets. Follow the macro flows to know where the market goes in the Wall Street Examiner Pro Trader Macroliquidity reports. 

Join the conversation and have a little fun at Capitalstool.com. If you are a new visitor to the Stool, please register and join in! To post your observations and charts, and snide, but good-natured, comments, click here to register. Be sure to respond to the confirmation email which is sent instantly. If not in your inbox, check your spam filter.

1 Comment

  1. PekkaT

    Thanks for your perspectives, Lee! We’re kind of hostages of Reuters and Bloomberg (etc.) here in Finland as all the news are just copy&paste translations of how well you guys in North America are doing. WBRGDS from here!

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

RSS
Follow by Email
LinkedIn
Share

Discover more from The Wall Street Examiner

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading