The power of UK wages is a puzzle for economists — and a rising downside for Financial institution of England policymakers.
Surging inflation, widespread labour shortages and a wave of public sector strikes drove progress in common nominal UK earnings to a report excessive of 8.3 per cent in the summertime of 2023. Since then, the economic system has stalled, vacancies fallen and employers have put the brakes on hiring. Productiveness, the long-term determinant of wages, has been falling since 2023.
But common earnings within the three months to January had been nonetheless 5.9 per cent higher than a yr earlier — and have been outpacing inflation for greater than a yr and a half.
Larger pay packets are a lift to family funds but in addition a fear for the BoE, which sees present charges of wage progress as inflationary, until underpinned by higher productiveness.
Understanding what’s going on will subsequently be important to the outlook for rates of interest.
Is wage progress actually as sturdy because it appears?
The BoE’s Financial Coverage Committee downplayed the most recent official wage information because it introduced its choice to depart rates of interest unchanged at 4.5 per cent on Thursday.
A 6.1 per cent improve in personal sector common weekly earnings had been fuelled by some sectors the place pay progress was typically risky, it stated. Different indicators had been according to the BoE’s estimate, printed in February, of underlying wage progress barely above 5 per cent.
However this nonetheless means wage progress is “at an elevated stage and above what may very well be defined by financial fundamentals”, the MPC stated.
The MPC added that one of many two fundamental dangers it could concentrate on within the run-up to its Might assembly was “the extent to which there may very well be extra persistence in home wage and costs”. The opposite threat it flagged was of geopolitical tensions pushing the economic system right into a deeper downturn.

Can pay progress come down?
Wage progress does look set to sluggish over the approaching yr. Official information reveals pay pressures moderating within the final couple of months. The BoE’s personal surveys, and information collected by the analysis organisation Brightmine, counsel employers will give pay awards to present workers of between 3 and 4 per cent in 2025.
Some employers will squeeze pay awards by 1 to 2 share factors to offset the influence of upper payroll taxes from April, the BoE’s brokers discovered.
However Rob Wooden, chief UK economist on the consultancy Pantheon Macroeconomics, stated this may nonetheless possible go away earnings progress above 4 per cent on the ONS’ measure — too excessive to be in keeping with conserving inflation heading in the right direction at 2 per cent, within the absence of upper productiveness.
What’s driving it?
One doable issue is a sequence of huge will increase within the statutory minimal wage. This doesn’t normally have an effect on median earnings. However employers such because the retailer Subsequent have warned of a “ripple impact”, elevating wages for workers larger up the dimensions to ensure there are nonetheless incentives for development.
A change within the mixture of jobs within the economic system may be a part of the reason. Knowledge launched on Thursday reveals employment has fallen within the low-wage retail sector over the previous yr, whereas extra individuals are employed in skilled areas and in monetary providers.
However Xiaowei Xu, senior analysis economist on the Institute for Fiscal Research, a think-tank, stated these elements might solely clarify “a tiny fraction” of the disconnect between pay progress and the state of the economic system.
An additional risk floated by BoE governor Andrew Bailey — that productiveness progress may not be as dire because the official information suggests — doesn’t persuade economists.
“As if,” Greg Thwaites, analysis director on the Decision Basis think-tank, wrote in a current blog.
Why is the Financial institution of England fearful?
The massive concern for the BoE is that one thing has modified within the construction of the UK economic system, that means that staff and employers are actually adjusting to a “new regular”, the place wages develop at 3.5 or 4 per cent a yr, and inflation hovers nearer to three per cent.
“That will be extra expensive to vary if it turned entrenched,” Claire Lombardelli, BoE deputy governor, warned on the finish of 2024.
Wooden argues that that is already occurring and policymakers are “far too sanguine” a couple of marked rise in family expectations of inflation 5 and 10 years forward.
Within the years main as much as the Covid pandemic, annual pay rises of three per cent turned normal as a result of individuals anticipated inflation to common 2 per cent over time, he famous. Now, “households count on the Financial institution of England to do completely nothing . . . and to permit inflation to run effectively above goal endlessly”.
Why aren’t households spending?
A further puzzle is why real-terms wage positive aspects will not be but boosting client spending. Official statistics present that each retail gross sales and general family consumption stay beneath their pre-pandemic stage, with individuals saving a traditionally excessive share of their revenue.

Analysts say spending ought to choose up as soon as households have rebuilt buffers that had been depleted in the course of the pandemic. However individuals nonetheless fear about rising meals, power and housing prices, threats of cuts to jobs and public spending, and discuss of commerce wars and rearmament.
Sandra Horsfield, economist on the funding financial institution Investec, stated the necessity for larger defence spending could be “unsettling” for UK customers, in addition to the specter of US tariffs leaving individuals “questioning how the [UK] normal financial scenario will fare”.