Business World

It’s a good time to find a job in these countries

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UNEMPLOYME­NT is falling almost everywhere. Wages aren’t rising much anywhere.

From York, UK to Montreal, and Osaka to Seattle, it’s a pretty good time to be looking for a job as a member of the labor force in many developed countries.

Unemployme­nt rates in Group of 7 nations such as Canada, the US, Britain, Japan and Germany are nearing or even slightly below what officials describe as a maxed-out jobs market.

But wage gains worldwide have been only creeping along. For developed economies, that means the powerful cycle of higher compensati­on fueling stronger demand and then business investment and, eventually, a little more pricing power, has proven elusive.

“It is a mystery,” said Torsten Slok, chief internatio­nal economist at Deutsche Bank AG. “We’re barely seeing any wage growth.”

Solving this puzzle matters, since it casts uncertaint­y over the health of the world’s labor markets and the direction of monetary policy. Central banks, which are supposed to tune their policy rates to inflation, could end up tightening too fast too soon if they conclude employment gains mean inflation is right around the corner. Or if they focus on the weak wage gains, they may end up leaving rates too low for too long, fueling asset bubbles.

RATE DECISIONS

US Federal Reserve officials conclude their meeting Wednesday and markets are pricing in a quarter-point rate hike as part of a gradual normalizat­ion of rates from crisis lows. The Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and the Swiss National Bank release decisions on Thursday.

Until now, policy makers have blamed the paucity of wage gains on existing economic slack. But that explanatio­n is starting to look weak.

In the US, the number of workers unwillingl­y stuck in part-time jobs is back at 2008 lows. In Japan, where policy makers want higher inflation, labor shortages in service industries such as lodging and elderly care aren’t resulting in higher pay. In Canada, the jobless rate has dropped to a post-recession low, but wages have been growing at the slowest pace in more than a decade and aren’t keeping up with inflation.

Even in the UK, where pay gains picked up last year, there’s been a recent slowdown — which may partly be due to uncertaint­y since the nation voted to leave the European Union — and evidence points to real wage gains shrinking as inflation accelerate­s. While data Wednesday showed Britain’s jobless rate matched its lowest since 1975, basic earnings grew just 0.8% after adjusting for inflation, the least since 2014.

In Germany, where the economy is growing at a rate above the long-term trend, the lack of robust wage gains may be linked to the long- standing restraint of labor unions, mindful of the export-oriented country’s hypercompe­titive attitude to global trade. Germany’s Federal Statistics Office reported in February that inflation- adjusted wages grew by 1.8% in 2016, the slowest pace in three years. All the more puzzling since Germany is running with the lowest unemployme­nt rate since reunificat­ion.

And as Germany is the euro area’s largest economy, it’s a matter of concern for European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, who called wages a “key point” in the assessment of the economy last week. In the central bank’s pursuit of just under 2% inflation over the medium term, wage growth has to return.

It’s “the linchpin of a selfsustai­ned increase in inflation,” Draghi said on March 9. “That is the key variable that we should look at.”

LOW PRODUCTIVI­TY

And it’s not just the G-7. In an interview with Bloomberg News Monday in Sydney, Australian Treasurer Scott Morrison said stagnant wage growth is his nation’s biggest economic problem.

“Wage earnings of Australian­s have been flat,” Morrison said. “It’s been a while since they’ve had a good pay rise.”

A deeper reason for slow pay raises may be the malaise in global productivi­ty, defined as the amount of output produced in a period of work. Productivi­ty gains can come from a variety of places and is that magical mix of mechanizat­ion, technology, human ingenuity, and constant innovation in the way services are delivered and goods are produced.

In the US, year- over- year productivi­ty rose 1% in 2016, compared with 2.4% in 2007, the last year of expansion before the financial crisis.

“I hate to say it but we may be in a new normal for wage growth,” said Omair Sharif, senior US economist at Societe Generale in New York. “Until you get productivi­ty moving higher, it may be hard to get nominal wage growth above 3%.”

When productivi­ty is rising, companies can push more goods and services out the door at a lower cost. Some of the increasing profits may accrue to labor in the best of cases, lifting compensati­on. Low productivi­ty means that companies have to hire more people to get the job done as GDP expands. That helps underpin demand as more consumers are getting a paycheck. But compensati­on isn’t rising much.

US payrolls increased by 235,000 jobs last month and the unemployme­nt rate stood at 4.7%, near the 4.8% Fed estimate of a rate that represents maximum use of labor resources. Average hourly earnings rose 2.8% in nominal terms for the 12-month period, similar to gains over the past year. The consumer price index rose 2.5% in January, so in real terms wage increases are low. — Bloomberg

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