
The U.S. affordability crisis is multifaceted and has been growing for 45 years, caused by low pay and high prices. Many factors have been depressing workers’ pay including the failure to raise the minimum wage, the weakening of unions, globalization, gig work, and reduced competition for workers.
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The U.S. affordability crisis is multifaceted and caused by low pay and high prices. (Previous posts have discussed the reasons for high prices.) This post will discuss the factors leading to low pay.
Over the last 45 years, workers’ pay has barely kept up with the increase in prices (i.e., inflation). And the pay increases there have been, have gone disproportionately to high earners. A study by the Economic Policy Institute found that between 1979 and 2019 the annual wages (adjusted for inflation) of the lowest-income 90% of workers increased by 26%, while the wages of those in the top 1% rose by 160%. The next richest 4% of workers saw their wages increase by 75%. CEOs now make about 300 times what their typical employee makes, while in 1960s they only made 20 times as much as the typical worker.
Good, middle-class blue- and white-collar jobs have been lost to globalization, while the compensation for the remaining jobs has declined due to the purposeful undermining of unions and global pay competition. The result is a crushing affordability crisis for many current and formerly middle-class households, as well as for lower income households.
According to a Brookings Institute analysis, 43% of American families can’t afford to pay for housing, food, health care, child care, and transportation. This figure is 59% for Black families and 66% for Latino families. The shift in income from workers to executives and investors has been dramatic: in 1947 workers received 70% of total national income, while today they get only 59%. Unlike the previous 35 years, after 1980, workers did not receive wage increases that were in line with their increases in productivity: from 1979 to 2025 workers’ productivity increased by 87% but their compensation only increased 33%. According to a Rand Corporation analysis, in 1975, the 90% of workers at the bottom of the income spectrum received 67% of national income, while in 2019 (the latest data it had) they received just 47% of national income. This highlights again the skewing of income to the top 10%. It calculated that if, in 2023, the 90% of workers with the lowest incomes had received 67% of national income (as they did in 1975), they would have earned an additional $4 trillion or, on average, each worker would have made $28,000 more than they did. Over the period from 1975 to 2023, if these workers had received 67% of national income, they would, in aggregate, have received $79 trillion more in income. [1]
There are many factors that have been depressing workers’ pay. They include:
- Failure to raise the minimum wage. The federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour is only 29% of a typical worker’s wage today; in 1968, it was 53% of the typical wage. If the minimum wage had been raised at the same pace as productivity growth since the late 1960s, it would be over $24 an hour today.
- Dramatic weakening of unions by the emasculation of pro-union government policies and of the enforcement of labor laws, as well as by the monopolistic power of huge employers. These have resulted in a huge shift in power from workers to employers over the last 45 years. Union membership has declined from roughly a third of workers in the 1950s to under one-tenth of workers today and only one-sixteenth of private sector workers.
- Globalization, which shipped jobs overseas and put downward pressure on the pay for the remaining jobs.
- Gig work and the misclassification of workers as contractors and not employees, which reduces wages, removes the protections for employees that are in labor laws, and typically means they get no benefits (e.g., health insurance, sick or vacation time, and retirement benefits). A 2021 study estimated that nine million American workers, from Amazon and FedEx delivery personnel to Uber and Lyft drivers, earn between 15% and 30% less than they would as employees.
The gig work-based companies, using AI with vast amounts of personal data and tremendous computer processing power, can tweak the pay of gig workers instantaneously so each worker gets the minimum pay for which they’re willing to do a job. For example, Uber pays drivers based on their past behavior. If a driver is hungry for work, perhaps because they badly need the income, and therefore always grabs the first job that is offered, Uber will pay them less because it knows they’ll take the job. On the other hand, Uber will offer more to a driver that waits for a better paying option. - Reduced competition for workers among employers due to fewer, very large employers and the widespread use of non-compete clauses in workers’ contracts (which prevent workers from moving to similar work for another company, down to and including other franchisees of the same fast-food chain). The Federal Trade Commission under President Biden banned non-compete agreements but the Trump administration undid this.
Capitalism in the U.S. is out of control. Competition has been stymied and monopolistic power is widespread. This has happened because of the failure to enforce antitrust laws for 45 years (except for four years under President Biden).This means the invisible hand of a market economy and the economic “rules” of supply and demand do not work to give fair compensation to workers. The rules of the economic game have been rigged to favor large employers. One indicator that clearly confirms this is that corporate profits are at very high levels in terms of percentage of revenue. In 1980, 80% of corporate income was paid to workers; in 2025, that percentage was under 72% with the difference largely going to profits.
Regulators have been compromised (aka captured) by the large employers through the political influence garnered by campaign spending and lobbying, as well as the revolving door of personnel between government regulatory positions and private industry jobs. As a result, many aspects of corporate behavior have undergone deregulation, which allows companies to increase profits by, for example, blocking increases in the minimum wage, shipping jobs overseas, gig work, breaking existing unions, blocking union organizing, failing to negotiate in good faith with unions, and frequently preventing new unions from ever getting a contract. In 2018, 63% of new unions, each of which had been voted for by a majority of workers, failed to get their employer to agree to a contract within a year. Amazon workers at a New York City warehouse voted decisively for a union in April 2022, but as of December 2025, Amazon had refused to even begin contract negotiations with them. This reflects a lack of effective labor laws and a lack of enforcement of them.
My next post will discuss steps to take to tackle the affordability crisis.
[1] Meyerson, H., 12/3/25, “The $79 trillion heist,” The American Prospect (https://prospect.org/2025/12/03/79-trillion-heist-worker-pay/)




