|
|
State of Working New York 2007
Encouraging Recent Gains, but
Troubling Long-Term Trends
Upstate Regions Gain Jobs,
Led by Buffalo Metro Area
Four years into an economic
expansion, New Yorkers finally got a slight raise last year, according to this
year's edition of The State of Working New York. In particular, the
troubled upstate economy has experienced encouraging payroll growth, with
Buffalo leading the way. But overall, these modest gains stand out against a
backdrop of worrisome long-term trends. |
|
|
|
|
|
For immediate
release:
Saturday, September 1, 2007
Contact:
James Parrott, Ph.D., FPI Deputy Director
and Chief Economist
212-721-5624 (office), 917-880-9931 (mobile)
Jo Brill, FPI Director of Communications
914-671-9442 (mobile)
New Report on the State of Working New York: Modest Improvements in Wages, but
Troubling Long-Term Trends
Upstate Regions Gain Jobs, Led by Buffalo Metro Area
Four years into an
economic expansion, New Yorkers finally got a slight raise last year, according
to this year's edition of The State of Working New York, released today
by the Fiscal Policy Institute. Real median wages were up for the first time in
four years, increasing by 1.7 percent in 2006.
One important reason
earnings increased, the report concludes, is New York State's new minimum wage
of $7.15 per hour. The minimum wage was raised in three stages since January of
2005. "Opponents of the increase predicted that it would cause widespread job
loss," says James Parrott, chief economist of the Fiscal Policy Institute. "But
today, we see the best of both worlds: job growth together with improvement in
wages."
Still, on the whole,
the increases are only modest. "It's encouraging finally to see some improvement
in wages," says Fiscal Policy Institute's executive director, Frank Mauro. "But,
four years into an economic expansion we would hope to see much stronger and
more sustained gains than these."
An encouraging aspect
of the recent growth is the evidence of growth in the upstate economy. Led by
the Buffalo metropolitan area, payroll job growth in Western and Northern New
York was 0.8 percent for the 12 months ending this past July, the best relative
job growth for Western and Northern New York in over a decade. And between 2004
and 2006, most upstate metropolitan areas rose in national rankings of per
capita income growth.
The modest gains are set against some
worrisome long-term trends, according to the report. Among the central concerns
are:
- A wage-productivity gap. Productivity has been
increasing rapidly, but workers are not sharing in the gains. Productivity has
grown by a strong 1.7 percent a year, while wage growth averaged less than 0.2
percent a year.
- A reduction in benefits and social insurance for
workers. Employers are misclassifying an increasing number of workers as
"independent contractors," stripping them of the protection of workers
compensation and unemployment insurance, overtime pay, sick leave, and of
employer co-payment of Social Security taxes. Employee misclassification now
affects nearly 10 percent of all workers in New York.
- Economic polarization
and high levels of poverty. Census data for 2006 show that New York again
has the greatest level of economic polarization of all 50 states. Census data
may even understate the extent of polarization. While the Census data show the
top five percent of New York households receiving 25 percent of the income,
the more definitive income tax data from the State Division of Budget show the
wealthiest five percent of taxpayers accounting for nearly half (47 percent)
of all income. New York also has the dubious distinction of having both high
per capita income and high poverty. Poverty rates in the upstate cities are
around 30 percent, much higher than the state overall, which in turn has a
higher poverty rate than the nation as a whole.
- Getting a job still
isn't enough to lift families out of poverty. The number of working
families who are poor is much higher today than it was in 1990, despite a
greater number of poor people who are working. The percentage of people in
working families who are poor is up from six percent in 1990 to ten percent in
2005; some 800,000 New Yorkers from working families live in poverty. A third
of all children in working families in New York State (nearly half, 47
percent, of those in New York City) live in families with incomes less than
twice the poverty level.
"The New York economy
looks better for workers today than it did a year ago, but it is still far from
healthy," according to Parrott. "Workers are taking home a decreasing fraction
of the value they are creating, they have less economic security, and there is
deep-seated economic polarization."
The Fiscal Policy Institute (FPI) is a
nonpartisan research and education organization that focuses on tax, budget, and
economic issues that affect the quality of life and the economic well being of
New York State residents. FPI reports are available at
www.fiscalpolicy.org.
####
|
|
|
|