Leaders | Blue-collar bonanza

A new age of the worker will overturn conventional thinking

Around the rich world, wage gaps are shrinking

Illustration: Lisa Sheehan

Few ideas are more unshakable than the notion that the rich keep getting richer while ordinary folks fall ever further behind. The belief that capitalism is rigged to benefit the wealthy and punish the workers has shaped how millions view the world, whom they vote for and whom they shake their fists at. It has been a spur to political projects on both left and right, from the interventionism of Joe Biden to the populism of Donald Trump. But is it true?

Even as the suspicion of free markets has hardened, evidence for the argument that inequality is rising in the rich world has become flimsier. Wage gaps are shrinking. Since 2016 real weekly earnings for those at the bottom of America’s pay distribution have grown faster than those at the top. Since the covid-19 pandemic this wage compression has gone into overdrive; according to one estimate, it has been enough to reverse an extraordinary 40% of the pre-tax wage inequality that emerged during the previous 40 years. A blue-collar bonanza is under way.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline "Blue-collar bonanza"

Blue-collar bonanza: Why conventional wisdom on inequality is wrong

From the December 2nd 2023 edition

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