-
-
Save MattCowgill/549ba5ed6ef00aa477811b22ddf47ae9 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
library(auseconhist) # remotes::install_github("MattCowgill/auseconhist") | |
library(readabs) | |
library(tidyverse) | |
library(slider) | |
butlin <- auseconhist::butlin_t7 |> | |
filter(!is.na(awe), | |
year >= 1901) |> | |
select(date = year, value = awe, cpi) |> | |
mutate(series = "awe", | |
source = "Butlin, Dixon & Lloyd (2014)", | |
date = ymd(paste(date, "06", "01", sep = "-"))) | |
awe <- read_awe("awe") | |
awote <- read_awe("awote") | |
cpi <- read_cpi() | |
abs <- awe |> | |
bind_rows(awote) |> | |
group_by(series = wage_measure) |> | |
padr::pad("day") |> | |
fill(value) |> | |
select(date, value, series) |> | |
mutate(source = "ABS") |> | |
left_join(cpi, | |
by = "date") |> | |
filter(!is.na(cpi)) | |
butlin |> | |
bind_rows(abs) |> | |
group_by(series, source) |> | |
mutate(real_awe = (value / cpi) * cpi[date == ymd("2010-06-01")]) |> | |
mutate(real_awe_10yago = slide_index_dbl(.x = real_awe, | |
.i = date, | |
.f = \(x) x[1], | |
.before = years(10), | |
.complete = TRUE)) |> | |
mutate(real_awe_growth = (real_awe / real_awe_10yago) - 1) |> | |
arrange(real_awe_growth) |
MattCowgill
commented
Feb 19, 2024
Interesting.. if am reading that right, it doesn't look like it is even in the top 10 of of 10 year periods (though obviously a bit of overlap between them there).
Do you have the decade to 2013 value on hand by chance?
-1.5% on the AWE (all employees), 0.0% on AWOTE (full-time employees) @dylanjmcconnell
Thanks - so not even close really. Will pass on to Ross and Rod (unless you have any objections). No idea how they came up with the number
Sure thing @dylanjmcconnell
There are 3 periods in which real wages have fallen: the Great Depression (decade to the mid-30s), the 90s recession (mid-80s to mid-90s) and 2013-2023.
The fact that the past 10 years has anything in common with those two other periods is damning in itself, and makes the point they want to make. But - unless they're using some other data source I'm aware of - the claim that this is the first 10 year period in which real wages have fallen is not correct.