Why is there a gap between productivity vs wage, that began in the 70s?

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I think everyone’s seen the famous graph from the Economic Policy Institute, that show that while Productivity has been growing in a steady and linear fashion decades after decades, wage began to stagnate in the 70s.

Since the 70s, wage have grown about +0.6% per year, while productivity has grown at an average of 1.4% per year. That gap is enormous and it is compounding over time.

Can someone me why it’s happened?

In: Economics

20 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Very simple: the productivity gains went to the CEOs and shareholders. The stronghold of the shareholders on the economy started in the 80s. Thank you Ronald Reagan. And still there are many people who think he was a great president.

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