Our key takeaway: The evidence indicates that, for the first time in the twenty-first century, real wage growth has fallen to negative values. According to the ILO, the cumulative impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the recent cost-of-living crisis are hitting workers and their families hard, and the impacts are especially severe for lower-income workers. While the ILO primarily offers policy recommendations for governments, its findings carry significant implications for companies as well: these real wage hits will be felt by workers in their operations and wider value chains. When fed into companies’ human rights due diligence, these latest figures may have implications in terms of assessing salient risks and prioritising measures around living wage.
The International Labour Organization (ILO) published its Global Wage Report 2022-23: The Impact of Inflation and COVID-19 on Wages and Purchasing Power (November 2022), which tracks the evolution of real total wage bills (gross wages paid by employers) from 2019 to 2022: