Originally posted by GePap
Any of you gents care to challenge the fact that payrolls are lowet today than at the end of 2000?
Any of you gents care to challenge the fact that payrolls are lowet today than at the end of 2000?
Employment today is 131,224,000. The average hourly compensation for all US employees in 2002 is $17.18 (warning: URL might not work due to it being an applet and my losing the original page from the bls.gov site. Sorry.

In March 2000, we had 1.275 million more people employed for a total employment of 132,507,000 with an average wage of $15.80. This comes out to an hourly payroll of $2.095 billion and a yearly payroll of $4.187 trillion.
Therefore, despite his assertion, payrolls have gone up in the Bush years, both in terms of cost per worker (including wages) and aggregate. However, I would prefer an official cite (not one from Faux News or the Internationale Workers Press or something) to my reasoning. Since GePap made the declaration, I'm sure you would be delighted to provide us with a link to the original source of payroll data. Thanks, man.

Comment