US Worker Pay Hits Record Low Share of GDP
American workers' share of economic output falls to a 76-year low despite rising productivity and profits.
American workers are taking home the smallest portion of the country’s economic output since federal records began in 1947, according to new data that highlights a growing disconnect between economic growth and employee compensation.
Figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reveal that the share of GDP paid to workers through wages and salaries fell to 53.8% in the third quarter of last year. This marks the lowest level ever recorded in the modern data series.
The figure represents a sharp decline from 54.6% in the previous quarter and sits well below the 55.6% average recorded so far in the 2020s. This trend has emerged even as the overall economy expands and many companies report some of their strongest profit margins in decades, raising fresh questions about income distribution.
A Widening Gap Between Growth and Wages
The labor share metric, tracked since 1947, briefly spiked in 2020 during the pandemic but has been on a steady downward trajectory since. Over the same period, corporate profits have climbed, suggesting that the benefits of GDP expansion are not being shared proportionally with the workforce.
The BLS defines labor share as "the percentage of economic output that accrues to workers in the form of compensation." This includes not only wages and salaries but also bonuses and pension contributions. Despite solid GDP growth, this percentage has continued to fall.
Productivity Surges as Hiring Stays Muted
The same BLS report that detailed the shrinking labor share also showed a significant jump in U.S. labor productivity, which rose at its fastest pace in two years during the third quarter. Economists suggest this gain may be partly linked to the increasing adoption of artificial intelligence.
This creates a complex economic picture:
• On one hand, higher productivity allows for faster GDP growth without triggering higher inflation.
• On the other, it enables companies to increase their output while hiring fewer workers, putting downward pressure on overall wage growth relative to GDP.
More data is needed to fully understand AI's long-term impact on jobs and pay, but the current trend points toward a scenario where efficiency gains are not translating into a larger slice of the economic pie for employees.
The Fed's View on a Cautious Labor Market
Federal Reserve officials are closely monitoring these dynamics. Tom Barkin, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, characterized the current situation as a "low-hiring environment" with modest job growth.
Recent BLS figures support this view, showing employers added 50,000 jobs last month. The unemployment rate edged down to 4.4%, but the pace of hiring has slowed considerably.
"This fine balance between a modest job growth environment with a modest labor-supply growth environment seems to be continuing, and that was encouraging," Barkin told reporters.
Businesses Prioritize Efficiency
According to Barkin, businesses are remaining cautious, choosing to rely on productivity gains to operate with fewer workers rather than expanding their payrolls. This strategic choice is a key factor shaping hiring decisions and contributing to the suppressed labor share, even as GDP continues to grow.
He stressed that Federal Reserve officials must remain vigilant about the dual risks of rising unemployment and persistent inflation.
Uncertainty Clouds Future Rate Cuts
While policymakers cut the benchmark interest rate for a third consecutive meeting last month, they are divided on the path forward. Uncertainty surrounding inflation and the labor market has tempered expectations for further cuts.
Investors are currently pricing in two quarter-point rate cuts this year, with the first move not anticipated until April or June.
Barkin noted that while inflation has improved, the fight is not over. "Inflation has been above our target now for almost five years," he said. "It's in a lot better shape than it was two or three years ago, but it's certainly not all the way there."
He concluded that policymakers must keep a close eye on both sides of their mandate. "The unemployment rate has ticked up in the last year, and job growth is modest," Barkin said. "So I think you've got to watch both of them."


