capital ,

Hmmm..

Looking beyond the average, production/non-supervisory workers—roughly the bottom 82% of the wage distribution—started seeing positive real wage growth two months earlier in March 2023, now 14 months in a row (not shown).

Between 2019 and 2023, low-wage workers experienced historically fast real wage growth. The 10th percentile real hourly wage grew 12.1% over the four-year period. This tremendous real wage growth at the lower end of the wage distribution was exceptional, significantly faster than in any other business cycle peak since 1979.

But keep replying please because I could put your exact comments in the COVID threads I was arguing in back then. It's uncanny. It's the exact same shit conservatives say when data doesn't support their preconceived idea.

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