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U.S. Employment Costs Rise at Record Pace as Wages Surge

Published 10/29/2021, 08:33 AM
Updated 10/29/2021, 08:54 AM
© Bloomberg. Commuters in Grand Central Station Terminal in New York City.

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. employment costs rose at the fastest pace on record in the third quarter as companies across a variety of sectors raised wages against a backdrop of labor shortages. 

The employment cost index, a broad gauge of wages and benefits, rose 1.3% from the prior quarter, according to Labor Department data released Friday. The gauge increased 3.7% from a year earlier.

Compensation gains were broad-based across sectors, underscoring how a tight labor market has put pressure on many different types of firms to raise wages. Wages and salaries also rose at a record pace, surging 1.5% in the quarter.

Unlike the average hourly earnings figures in the monthly jobs report, the ECI isn’t impacted by employment shifts across industries and occupations -- something that’s been particularly severe amid the pandemic.

While millions of Americans remain out of work, businesses are struggling to hire and retain enough workers to stay abreast with resurgent demand. As a result, many companies have increased wages, offered one-time bonuses or bolstered other perks -- like flexible schedules -- to attract workers. 

Some companies -- like Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc (NYSE:CMG). and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) Inc. -- have raised prices to help offset increased labor costs, fueling concerns the rapid wage increases could lead to a wage-driven inflationary spiral. However, opponents argue that would require wages to continue to rise at a rapid pace year after year. Rising productivity also helps to absorb those inflationary pressures. 

How Companies See It

“It does feel like there’s more options for hourly employment and because of that, that’s putting pressure on the labor markets and hiring for the roles that we need.” -- Kimberly-Clark Corp (NYSE:KMB). CEO Michael Hsu, Oct. 25 earnings call

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“While we are seeing an impact from the rising commodity and labor costs we have also been adjusting pricing, which should help to compensate.” -- Tesla Inc. CFO Zachary Kirkhorn, Oct. 20 earnings call

“With a competitive labor market, this is putting some pressure on our labor cost, including higher acquisition and retention costs, which is not yet reflected in our current pricing. We expect to capture this value in future engagements, but it will take time to appear in our margin profile.” -- International Business Machines (NYSE:IBM) Corp. CFO James Kavanaugh, Oct. 20 earnings call

“We have had to make some wage rate adjustments in some of our factories, distribution centers and fleet drivers to I’d say attract and retain some of our employees.” -- Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW). CEO John G. Morikis, Oct. 26 earnings call

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

Latest comments

not enough ways for foreign nations to get usd to pay there debt payments. They have currency just the wrong type. Because people from the USA are not traveling anymore.... it's hard for there usd to go back to China and other nations.
Forbes just released an reallt bad article blaming the supply shortages on central planning. There trying to claim the government screwed everything up by micro managing the supply chain. They point to Biden giving extra funding to port facilities as proof. The government doesn't manage the supply chain, capitalists do. I'm not necessarily an fan of the central bank, but the private sector created these long supply chains. not the government, I've never seen such an desperate attempt to decieve, it's scarring the crap out of me. The reason prices are going up is because you don't produce enough domestically. You've lent foreign nations too much $$$. There's no way for the $$$ to flow back to repay the loans. I think this is an giant bomb about to go off.
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