Scramble for staff rises wages in the US
Scramble for staff rises wages in the US

Scramble for staff rises wages in the US

As the US economy reopened, restaurants, retailers and other employers have struggled to fill open positions.
Phillepus Uusiku
DELPHINE TOUITOU

An acute labour crunch amid the coronavirus pandemic is boosting US wages, with many large chains now paying US$15 an hour, a minimum level long sought by Democrats and labour activists.

The disruption of Covid-19 has led to record job openings, but also millions of unemployed workers, some of whom dropped out of the labour force to stay home to take care of children.

But some workers have used the pandemic to retire or try to change careers. Economists say that so far, the wage bump has not resulted in troubling inflation.

"For the first time since the late 1990s, low-wage workers have a little more leverage to demand higher pay," said David Cooper, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute, a progressive Washington think tank.

Facing a sudden jump in business as the US economy reopened, restaurants, retailers and other employers have struggled to fill open positions, and have boosted pay, and even offered signing bonuses or other perks to new workers.

Last week, pharmacy chain CVS became the latest big chain to announce plans to lift its minimum wage to US$15 an hour, joining a group that already includes Target, Chipotle and Amazon, among others. The new policy will take effect at CVS in July 2022.

Minimum wage

Walmart, the biggest private US employer, in late July announced it was dropping the US$1-a-day fee for its employee education program. The initiative supplements wages at the giant retailer, which pays less than its much smaller rival Costco.

The announcements come as President Joe Biden's effort to win a significant boost to the federal minimum wage remains stalled in Congress. Upon taking office, Biden sought to more than double the wage to US$15 an hour from US$7.25 where it has been for the last 12 years.

"What the Democrats could not accomplish, businesses are delivering to them because of pandemic effects," Rubeela Farooqi, chief US economist at High Frequency Economics, told AFP.

"There was so much opposition to a US$15 minimum wage but companies have no choice right now but to pay up to attract workers."

The competition for workers means average pay for supermarket and restaurant workers has now topped US$15, according to an article in The Washington Post.

"Overall, nearly 80% of US workers now earn at least US$15 an hour, up from 60% in 2014," the newspaper said, while adding that a US$15 average wage is different from a minimum wage and many workers still earn less. -Nampa/AFP

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