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Yes, American workers have been underpaid for the country’s entire history. $25 sets the wage increase in line with productivity increases since the 1970s, when wages and productivity decoupled.
TL;DR: The EPI graph isn’t measuring productivity vs. pay, even for “typical workers”; it’s measuring wage inequality, and images like these are the visual equivalent of out-of-context half-truth soundbites:
Yes, American workers have been underpaid for the country’s entire history. $25 sets the wage increase in line with productivity increases since the 1970s, when wages and productivity decoupled.
TL;DR: The EPI graph isn’t measuring productivity vs. pay, even for “typical workers”; it’s measuring wage inequality, and images like these are the visual equivalent of out-of-context half-truth soundbites:
https://www.reddit.com/r/badeconomics/comments/6rtoh4/productivity_pay_gap_in_epi_we_trust/
Economists aren’t serious people, they’re priests who worship their idealized version of the market.