Autoworkers Have Good Reason to Demand a Big Raise: Justin Fox

Sept. 7, 2023, 10:00 AM UTC

During the past 20 years, the inflation-adjusted average hourly wage of non-management US workers, also known as production and nonsupervisory employees, has risen 13%. That’s not exactly a rip-roaring pace — 0.6% a year. Then again, real hourly wages for production and nonsupervisory employees fell in the 1970s and 1980s and rose at only a 0.3% annual pace in the 1990s.

One group of American workers has had a much different experience over the past two decades. The average hourly wage for autoworkers on the production line has dropped 30% since 2003.

Autoworkers still make more per hour than their peers in the ...

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