Pay rises would have been 4 times higher if they matched productivity

New figures calculated by the European Trade Union Institute (ETUI) and European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) show that wage increases in the European Union over the last 16 years would have been FOUR TIMES higher if they had fully reflected productivity increases.

It is standard economic theory that wage increases should follow productivity increases. But in Europe productivity has increased far more than wages.

From 2000 to 2016 productivity increased three times more than wages in Germany and Croatia, and two times more than wages in Poland and Belgium.

In Austria productivity increased 65% more than wages, 60% in Spain, 30% in the Netherlands.

In Hungary, Romania, Portugal and Greece real wages went down in the last 16 years, while productivity increased.

 

% Increase in productivity, 2000-2016

% Increase in wages, 2000-2016

EU 28

10

2,5

Croatia

42

11

Germany

13

4

Belgium 

14

7

Poland

64

32

Austria

11

6

Spain

16

10

Netherlands

15

12

Hungary

19

-5

Portugal

18

-3

Romania

10

-15

Greece

2

-10

Source: AMECO database. Productivity is real GDP per person employed and wages are real compensation per employee.

“Wage increases have been lagging behind for years” said Esther Lynch, Confederal Secretary of the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC). “Working people are not getting a fair share of the value of their work.”

“The wide gap between productivity increases and wage increases provides solid proof of the need for pay rises for working people across the EU.”

“Fair collective bargaining needs to take place between trade unions and employers across Europe to achieve decent and sensible pay rises. Governments and EU institutions should be doing all they can to enable and encourage collective wage negotiations.”

2016 are the last year that wage statistics are available. There have been wage increases since, including some substantial settlements in Germany, but that fact remains that productivity has far outstripped wages this century.

For more information, please read the ETUI blog: The increasing gap between wages and productivity: it’s time to act!