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Why Some Men Earn Less Than They Did 40 Years Ago

Last Tuesday, the government's annual poverty and income report revealed that the earnings of male workers in the middle of the income ladder are lower today than they were almost 40 years ago.

In 1973, the median male worker earned just over $49,000 when adjusted for inflation, while in 2010 that worker made about $1,500 less. Yet, in the same period, the output of the economy has more than doubled, and the productivity of workers has risen steadily.

What Has Changed

MIT economics professor Frank Levy says U.S. blue-collar workers had two things going for them between World War II and the 1970s that they no longer have.

"One was that you had a really strong job market for blue-collar labor," he says.

The strong market was partly because European countries and Japan were still rebuilding their manufacturing capacity, destroyed during the war. Also, a lot of technology that has since replaced labor hadn't come on line yet. Levy says these factors provided "a lot of jobs in manufacturing and other related occupations."

Those workers, Levy says, also had a set of institutions and societal norms that came out of the Great Depression and the New Deal, which ensured wages would grow for most people as productivity grew.

"There were kind of conventions about getting cost-of-living wages. Unions were part of it, and even the government getting involved implicitly in wage and price decisions was part of it," he says.

However, after the food and oil price spikes of the 1970s — a decade in which the Consumer Price Index rose whopping 100 percent — the idea of wages rising in lock-step with the cost of living was abandoned.

"What you got was a more minute-to-minute, free-market calibration of what wages were like," Levy says.

Add to that global competition and technological innovation that eliminated U.S. manufacturing jobs, and the country ended up with a surplus of blue-collar workers. Companies didn't have to raise wages to attract and keep them.

Some analysts have suggested that wages have stagnated because workers are being compensated with costly health-care benefits now. Levy says that's offset by the loss of pension benefits, so factoring in fringe benefits doesn't change the trend.

The Education Factor

One big problem is that today's median American male worker has the same level of education as his counterpart in 1973. He has just a high school diploma — no college — so he's not well prepared to compete for better jobs.

"Educational progress sort of atrophied," University of Wisconsin economist Tim Smeeding says. "So, in other words, we have not been graduating people from college as fast as we should have."

Just over 30 percent of men attend college today. Women attend and graduate college at significantly higher rates. Their median earnings, while still lower than men's, have been rising along with productivity growth in the past decades.

Over the last 20 years, even men who have college degrees haven't seen their wages reflect the growth in productivity. It's only men with advanced degrees who have kept up and have done very well.

Meanwhile, global competitors are raising the education levels of their workers. If America doesn't figure out how to raise the skill levels of its workforce, the future could continue to be bleak for those in the middle, Smeeding says.

"I'm afraid we have a lost generation out there of young people aren't well prepared, who can't find work, and they're never going to realize the American dream," he says.

If the fundamental American dream is that each generation does better than the previous one, that hasn't been happening for men in the middle of the U.S. income ladder for decades.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

John Ydstie has covered the economy, Wall Street, and the Federal Reserve at NPR for nearly three decades. Over the years, NPR has also employed Ydstie's reporting skills to cover major stories like the aftermath of Sept. 11, Hurricane Katrina, the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal, and the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. He was a lead reporter in NPR's coverage of the global financial crisis and the Great Recession, as well as the network's coverage of President Trump's economic policies. Ydstie has also been a guest host on the NPR news programs Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Weekend Edition. Ydstie stepped back from full-time reporting in late 2018, but plans to continue to contribute to NPR through part-time assignments and work on special projects.