Real Wage

Economics

The purchasing power of wages after adjusting for inflation, showing whether workers can actually buy more goods and services over time.

## Real Wage

Real wages adjust nominal wages for inflation to show actual changes in purchasing power. They are the most accurate measure of whether workers are better off over time.

### Calculation

```
Real Wage = Nominal Wage ÷ Price Index × 100
```

Or more simply:
```
Real Wage Growth = Nominal Wage Growth − Inflation Rate
```

### Historical Context

US real wages for non-supervisory workers were essentially flat from 1973 to 2019, despite significant nominal wage increases. This means the average worker's purchasing power barely improved over nearly 50 years.

### Recent Trends

After real wages declined in 2021–2022 (wages grew slower than inflation), 2023–2024 saw positive real wage growth as inflation fell faster than wage growth decelerated.

### Why It Matters

A nominal raise of 3% feels good until you realize inflation was 4%. Your real wage declined by 1%, meaning you can buy less than before the raise.