- A new
Fed report signals the pay boom seen through the pandemic is differing from city to city. - Businesses in coastal giants and Midwest cities told Fed banks they expect above-average
wage growth to continue.
The
The good news: working Americans are still seeing wages climb at a historic pace. Average hourly earnings rose by $0.13, or 0.4%, to $31.73 in March, accelerating from the mild gain seen through February and continuing the trend of above-average wage growth. With job openings and quits both near record highs through February, businesses continued to boost pay in hopes of attracting and keeping workers.
Yet the wage rally is starting to diverge. New Beige Book reports from the 12 regional
The pay-bump party is charging forward in New York, San Francisco, and Chicago
Workers in the largest US metropolitan areas are likely to enjoy bigger raises for a while longer.
Businesses surveyed by the New York Fed said they were still raising wages and "anticipated further increases in the months ahead," according to the
Employees in the San Francisco Bay Area also fared well through late March and early April. Businesses in contact with the San Francisco Fed said they were penciling in average raises of 5% for fiscal 2022. Health care and financial services firms reported plans for even larger raises in the months ahead.
Chicago businesses seemed to struggle more with finding available workers to begin with. Firms told the regional Fed bank they "rapidly" raised wages and benefits "both to attract new workers and retain existing talent." Some added that, while they had raised pay, they were still unable to fill openings due to a lack of job applicants.
Workers in the Midwest are also set to receive larger pay bumps for the time being. Employees in the St. Louis metro area increasingly pointed to elevated inflation — the fastest since 1981 — when bargaining for higher wages, according to the report.
Philadelphia, Boston, and Cleveland are showing the first signs of a cooldown
Other regions, while still showing healthy wage growth, are also signaling that the rally is cooling its jets.
Boston differed from some of its east-coast peers. Though a majority of businesses reported "moderate to robust" pay hikes, some manufacturers said wages were stable in recent months. The remarks come as lingering supply-chain strains hobble the industry and the Russia-Ukraine conflict drives up commodity prices. It's possible that, amid soaring material costs, manufacturers in the area are easing their plans for large pay increases.
Cleveland similarly set itself apart from the neighboring Chicago area, with more firms saying they aren't planning to keep the pay rally alive. The share of contacts reporting large increases fell to less than 60% in the latest Beige Book from 70% at the end of 2021, the central bank said. Some firms said their recent pay hikes didn't lead to improved hiring or retention, and that they couldn't afford to lift wages further.
The path for faster wage growth was mixed in the Atlanta region as well. Various businesses in the area told the Fed they plan to be more targeted with raises instead of lifting pay across the board. Some also noted that, while they planned to hold wage increases steady through 2022, persistently higher inflation could force them to rethink that strategy.
Some Philadelphia-area employees are starting to see wage growth cool. The pace of pay gains "appears to have risen moderately" and "somewhat less" than in the prior period, the Philadelphia Fed said. While no businesses reported lowering pay, many firms said the pay rally slowed.
Monthly wage gains seen through 2022 have already exceeded the historical norm, and extraordinary tightness in the