Low-Wage Workers Appear to be Leaving Workforce, According to Ludwig Institute

Inflation’s impact, with stagnant wage growth, may contribute to worker disillusion

While a drop in the percentage of Americans in the workforce classified as “functionally unemployed” appears to be a good indication of a recovering economy, issues with the workforce participation rate may indicate that low-wage earners are joining the ranks of discouraged workers, according to an analysis by the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity (LISEP).

LISEP’s April True Rate of Unemployment (TRU) report – a measure of the “functionally unemployed,” defined as the jobless, plus those seeking but unable to secure full-time employment paying above the poverty line – decreased by 0.4 percentage points, from 23.5% in March to 23.1%. While this is a positive trend, a deeper analysis reveals that the True Out of Population, the percentage of the entire adult population (age 16 and older) who could be classified as functionally unemployed, remained unchanged – an indication that the improved TRU may be attributed to low-wage workers leaving the active workforce and joining the ranks of “discouraged workers.”

Meanwhile, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported no change in its monthly unemployment report, remaining steady at 3.6% from March to April in spite of the addition of 428,000 new jobs.

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“The math is simple: when the government reports new jobs are added but the unemployment rate doesn’t change, it means low-wage workers are discouraged from working, as even with employment, they are falling farther behind,” said LISEP Chair Gene Ludwig. “And as the TRU data show, some are giving up and leaving the labor force entirely, which is alarming, considering the already-low labor force participation rate.

“We see inflation eating up buying power. And this is nothing new for low- and middle-income families, as the cost of necessities has outpaced the government-reported inflation rate for at least two decades.”

LISEP research released in March showed that the Consumer Price Index (CPI) has understated the impact of inflation on middle- and low-income households by 40% over the last 20 years.

By demographic, Hispanic workers saw the biggest TRU improvement, dropping by 1.6 percentage points to 25.7%, followed by Blacks workers, with a 1.4 percentage point drop to 26.5%. The large movement is likely beyond just those workers moving into the “discouraged” category and more likely a rebound from a significant uptick in the TRU for Black and Hispanic workers in March, when these groups saw 1.6 and 2.2 percentage point spikes, respectively. The TRU for White workers was up 0.2 percentage points for April at 22%. Both male and female TRU went down marginally and now stand at 18.6% (down 0.4) and 28.1% (down 0.1), respectively.

“While I would like to think this report constitutes a positive sign for our economy, the underlying data cannot be ignored – too many Americans remain among the working poor, which has only been exacerbated by recent inflationary trends,” Ludwig said. “Workers must, at the very least, have inflation-adjusted living wage if we are to see an equitable, sustainable recovery.”

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