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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (400543)4/29/2003 3:02:00 PM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Respond to of 769670
 
"The fast productivity and low unemployment of the late 1990s generated real wage growth that carried forward into 2001, when real weekly wages grew 2.5% at the median. But last year nominal wage growth slowed (by 1 to 1.5%) and, with higher inflation, has led to real wage declines for high, middle, and low wage workers."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (400543)4/29/2003 3:05:17 PM
From: Bald Eagle  Respond to of 769670
 
RE:Warning: Bush Economy Causing Wage Decline
Wrong, try reading the news some time

Workers' Wages and Benefits Up 1.3 Percent in
First Quarter

Tuesday, April 29, 2003


WASHINGTON — U.S. workers' wages and benefits rose by a brisk 1.3 percent in the
first three months of 2003, the biggest increase in nearly 13 years, even as
businesses struggled with the lackluster economy (search).

The increase in the employment cost
index (search) for the January to March
quarter was nearly twice as big as the 0.7
rise posted in the fourth quarter of 2002,
the Labor Department (search) reported
Tuesday.

Although companies have been keeping
work forces lean to deal with the uneven
economy, they are providing workers who
are still on the payrolls more generous
compensation packages. That's goods
news for the ranks of the employed but can
be a potential strain on some
profit-pressed companies.

Tuesday's report showed employment
costs growing more quickly than the 0.8
percent advance that economists expected.

The 1.3 percent rise registered in the first quarter was the largest increase since the
second quarter of 1990, when compensation went up by the same amount.

The costs of benefits, such as health insurance and vacations, continued to outpace
wage gains.

Benefit costs rose by a sizable 2.2 percent in the first quarter of 2003, following a 1.3
percent advance in the prior quarter. The increase in benefit costs in the first quarter was
the largest in 15 years.

Wages and salaries rose by a solid 1 percent in the first quarter, twice as fast as the 0.5
percent increase recorded in the fourth quarter. It marked the largest gain in wages and
salaries since the first quarter of 2001, when they rose by the same amount.

That's encouraging because income growth is the fuel for future spending by consumers,
the main force that has been keeping the economy going.

Consumers have been keeping their pocketbooks and wallet sufficiently open to support
economic growth, but businesses have been cautious amid the muddled economic
climate.

Coping with lackluster profits and uneven demand from customers, businesses have
been reluctant to increase capital spending and go on a hiring spree, major factors
restraining economic growth.

Economists believe the nation's unemployment rate will nudge up to 5.9 percent in April,
from 5.8 percent in March. The government releases the employment report for April on
Friday.

Even if the economy starts improving a bit later this year, the jobless rate probably will
creep up because job growth won't be strong enough to accommodate the expectation
that an improved climate will attract a lot more job seekers, economists say.

Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who is scheduled to appear on Capitol Hill
Wednesday, has expressed optimism that the economy will get back on surer footing
once all the uncertainties associated with the war are lifted.

The Fed held a key interest rate at a 41-year low of 1.25 percent in March. Economists
believe this rate will stay at its current super-low level for a while to help the economy
recover. President Bush wants Congress to pass a new round of tax cuts to help the
economy.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (400543)4/29/2003 3:06:21 PM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 769670
 
Kenneth, I used to think you had half a brain, but your constant posting of the same negative dribble has me wondering...



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (400543)4/29/2003 3:08:15 PM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 769670
 
"Wages and salaries rose by a solid 1 percent in the first quarter, twice as fast as the 0.5
percent increase recorded in the fourth quarter. It marked the largest gain in wages and
salaries since the first quarter of 2001, when they rose by the same amount."