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Wages Lag as Inflation Rises Unevenly

Wages Lag as Inflation Rises Unevenly

Are American paychecks really recovering? Not quite. Wage data from Bankrate shows wages have risen 21.5% since 2021, but that lags behind 22.7% inflation, leaving the average worker 1.2 percentage points behind—a gap that peaked at 4.8 points in 2022. Only sectors like healthcare, food service, retail, and hospitality have outpaced price gains; most others (especially education and federal employment) are further behind.

  • This wage gap is not just a statistic—it hits households directly, squeezing savings and putting goals like home ownership or retirement farther out of reach.
  • Only 54% of workers now report wage satisfaction, the lowest since 2014, according to New York Fed research.
  • Roughly 3 out of 4 Americans say their incomes still lag inflation, and higher-paying jobs have become scarcer.

Retirement plans and emergency funds are the first casualties of this ongoing squeeze. Federal workers, despite a 4.5% raise this year, face similar pitfalls thanks to slower pay structures and uneven cost-of-living adjustments. The bottom line: wage growth is helping some, but not most.

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