Staff on the assembly line of Mercedes-Benz in Germany. Technological advancements have hit workers' wages worldwide, says IMF. Alexander Koerner / Getty
Staff on the assembly line of Mercedes-Benz in Germany. Technological advancements have hit workers' wages worldwide, says IMF. Alexander Koerner / Getty
Staff on the assembly line of Mercedes-Benz in Germany. Technological advancements have hit workers' wages worldwide, says IMF. Alexander Koerner / Getty
Staff on the assembly line of Mercedes-Benz in Germany. Technological advancements have hit workers' wages worldwide, says IMF. Alexander Koerner / Getty

Global salary growth slowdown due to technology, says IMF


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The advance of technology is the biggest reason workers are earning a shrinking slice of the income pie, according to a new study by the IMF.

Labour’s share of national income declined in 29 of the world’s 50 biggest economies between 1991 and 2014, the IMF said in a study released on Monday.

Analysis suggests “technology is the largest contributor to the change in labour shares in the large majority of countries”, it said.

The second main component of income is capital. When wages grow more slowly than productivity, labour’s share of income falls as the owners of capital reap gains at a quicker pace. That often worsens income inequality because capital tends to be concentrated in the hands of a few, the IMF said in a blog accompanying the research.

The IMF’s finding is significant because economists have been debating what is to blame for decades of sluggish wage growth, especially in the West. The US president Donald Trump has blamed trade with countries such as China and Mexico for hurting American workers and hollowing out the nation’s manufacturing sector. The IMF study suggests technology is a bigger driver.

About half the decline in national labour shares can be traced to the impact of technology, according to the study, which is part of the World Economic Outlook. The full outlook, including the fund’s forecasts for global growth, will be released April 18 in Washington.

The study notes the rapid advance of information and communications technology has accelerated the automation of routine tasks, causing firms to substitute capital for workers.

Global economic integration has also played a part in labour’s declining share of income, the IMF said. The impact of changes in policies and institutions appears to be limited, although it is difficult to say how much of the slump has to do with the decline of labour unions, according to the fund.

The IMF has warned before of the threat from from the growing use of robots. A paper by fund economists in September drew on science fiction as well as economic analysis to show the likely “profound negative implications” for income distribution of increased automation. It even depicted an extreme scenario, or singularity, “in which capital takes over the entire economy to the exclusion of labour.”

* Bloomberg

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