A number of people have been talking about the apparent contradiction in economic attitudes and economic facts. Many of these key on a particular figure, the (real) median wage, which is not increasing the way the some would like.
If we consider this the main measure of economic well-being, allow me to offer a modest proposal for bringing that figure up. Consider five workers earning the following:
| Tom | $25K |
| Tanya | $50K |
| Dick | $75K |
| Jane | $100K |
| Harriet | $150K |
A quick glance will show that their median wage is $75K. Let's imagine someone -- say, a Paul Krugman -- thinks this number should be higher. Easy. Fire Tom and Tanya.
| Dick | $75K |
| Jane | $100K |
| Harriet | $150K |
The new median wage? $100K. That's 33% higher than it was before. Certainly, that's a good sign, and should be expected in a strong economy.
The question is, has anyone's economic well-being improved? Hmm.
OK, I must be doing something wrong. Let's start over. Tom and Tanya keep their jobs. Median wage back at $75K.
| Tom | $25K |
| Tanya | $50K |
| Dick | $75K |
| Jane | $100K |
| Harriet | $150K |
Now Harriet's business is doing really well. She needs some project managers. Starting wage: $50K. Wow! She needs three of them, right away.
| Tom | $25K |
| Tanya | $50K |
| Sandy | $50K |
| Roger | $50K |
| Jim | $50K |
| Dick | $75K |
| Jane | $100K |
| Harriet | $150K |
Sounds like Sandy, Roger and Jim's economic outlooks have improved considerably. That's $150K of new wealth every year that they keep working. Great for them and for the economy, no doubt.
But what's the new median wage? $50K. That's a drop of 33% from the median wage before these people got new jobs. Is it fair to conclude that things are getting worse?
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Of course I am offering this as reductio ad absurdum. Economic well-being can improve for millions of people, generating billions in new wealth (and tax revenues), and yet the median wage may stagnate or even go down.
In fact, that sounds a lot like our current economy. The US has created over 5 million new jobs in the last five years.
If the median wage has been steady during all this job creation, we might assume these new jobs are very close to the median. Last I read, it's around $15.60/hour which equates to around $31K/year.
So, 5 million people's income has increased from $0 to somewhere around $31K in the last five years. That sounds like economic progress to me, to the tune of $150 billion in new wages per year. All with a stagnant median wage.


