Skip to main content

Recovery in real wages looks sustainable

The latest labour market data provided further evidence that the recovery in wages now has momentum. Indeed, the headline (three-month average of the annual) growth rate in average weekly earnings picked up to 2.7% in April, the strongest since August 2011. Earnings growth is therefore significantly outpacing CPI inflation, which continues to hover around zero. The pick-up in wage growth partly reflects the significant tightening of the labour market which has occurred over the past eighteen months or so. Nonetheless, since productivity has begun to pick up too - indeed, annual growth in output per hour was 1.3% in Q1 - stronger wage growth is unlikely to prompt the MPC to hike interest rates this year. Indeed, we still think the first rise in Bank Rate will occur in the second quarter of 2016.


Become a client to read more

This is premium content that requires an active Capital Economics subscription to view.

Already have an account?

You may already have access to this premium content as part of a paid subscription.

Sign in to read the content in full or get details of how you can access it

Register for free

Sign up for a free account to gain:

  • Unlock additional content
  • Register for Capital Economics events
  • Receive email updates and economist-curated newsletters
  • Request a free trial of our services


Get access