Economic growth, stagnant wages: a new ELA report reveals the growing gap between capital and labour
The study also reveals deep structural inequalities within the labour market. Women earn on average about 15 per cent less than men, a gap that persists even when compared by occupation, sector and experience. Migrant workers face even more pronounced disparities, being paid 30% less per hour than non-migrants, a penalty linked to labour market segmentation and not to individual characteristics. Part-time workers (mostly women and migrants) also earn less per hour, over and above the mere reduction in working hours.
The report concludes that the pattern has been the same over the last few years: both in the crisis and in the recovery or in the inflationary period, capital has increased its share in the wealth generated while that of labour has decreased.