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Most workers make about the same as before the pandemic

But wages in NY, NJ and Connecticut did not keep up with inflation

BY TIM HENDERSON Stateline.org
Posted 8/23/24

The typical U.S. worker’s pay is about the same as it was in late 2019, after accounting for inflation. But workers in some states have seen sharply higher earnings, especially in scenic areas that are appealing to remote workers and have labor shortages.

In Montana, for example, average pay has increased 28.3 percent since before the pandemic, easily beating the roughly 19 percent national inflation rate during that time. That translates into an average raise of $260 a week to $1,178. No other state saw such a large gain, according to a new Stateline analysis of data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The numbers are from 2023, the latest available.

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