New Report:  The Low-Wage Recovery:  Industry Employment and Wages Four 
Years into the Recovery (April 2014)

This report updates NELP’s previous industry-based analyses of job loss 
and job growth trends during and after the Great Recession. The report 
shows that low-wage job creation was not simply a characteristic of the 
early recovery, but rather a pattern that has persisted for more than 
four years now.

We find that during the labor market downturn (measured from January 
2008 to February 2010), employment losses occurred throughout the 
economy, but were concentrated in mid-wage and higher-wage industries. 
By contrast, during the recovery (measured from February 2010 to 
February 2014), employment gains have been concentrated in lower-wage 
industries. Specifically:

--Lower-wage industries constituted 22 percent of recession losses, but 
44 percent of recovery growth.
--Mid-wage industries constituted 37 percent of recession losses, but 
only 26 percent of recovery growth.
--Higher-wage industries constituted 41 percent of recession losses, and 
30 percent of recovery growth.

Today, there are nearly two million fewer jobs in mid- and higher-wage 
industries than there were before the recession took hold, while there 
are 1.85 million more jobs in lower-wage industries.

Service-providing industries such as food services and drinking places, 
administrative and support services, and retail trade have led private 
sector job growth during the recovery. These industries, which pay 
relatively low wages, accounted for 39 percent of the private sector 
employment increase over the past four years.

full: http://www.nelp.org/page/content/lowwagerecovery2014/
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