speeches · September 9, 2021
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2021
The labor market story this summer has been employers’ struggle to �nd workers. Job
openings are at a record level. And while 5.6 million fewer people are employed today than
before the pandemic, there don’t seem to be enough people looking for work to �ll the
available openings. Labor force participation is down, and reservation wages are up.
But hiring is not employers’ only challenge. In what some are calling the “Great
Resignation,” employers are also struggling to retain workers. In April, the quits rate —
quits as a percent of total employment — hit a record high of 2.8 percent. In July, the rate
was only slightly lower at 2.7 percent.
So far, these hiring and retention issues seem most concentrated in lower-paying jobs.
Recent increases in wage growth among the lowest quartile of wage earners and lower-skill
workers — increases that outpace other workers’ — re�ect employer challenges in
recruiting and retaining these workers.
Over the coming months, with enhanced unemployment insurance ending, schools
reopening, and virus fears — hopefully — waning, we have been anticipating labor supply
and demand to better balance. But contacts across the Richmond Fed’s district do not seem
con�dent that we are near the end of the retention challenge, which in turn will further
pressure hiring. They’re preparing for further churn on the horizon — and this time, they
expect it to extend further into professional and managerial roles, where quit rates have
not yet been as elevated.
A few signs point to continued and perhaps, more broad-based, pressure on quits.
The quits rate re�ects con�dence in the labor market. The Conference Board’s labor market
di�erential — the di�erence between those who think jobs are plentiful versus hard to get
— reached the highest reading (44.1 percent) in July since 2000. And this con�dence can be
contagious. As co-workers leave for other jobs, workers may become more aware of the
opportunities they’re missing. And as new hires onboard with higher wages, current
employees may consider a change to secure a higher salary.
There may also be a backlog of quits. Many workers hung onto their jobs over the past year
and a half, waiting to make a move until the pandemic ended. Some may have been
motivated by a desire to avoid further instability in an already unstable period. Others may
have wished to avoid a fully remote onboarding experience. We may see some of this
backlog clear over the next several months.
Some of those who stayed in their jobs have had to bear excess workloads as �rms have
operated short-sta�ed. This issue is most visible in restaurants as managers beg for
patience with stretched-too-thin sta�. But it’s not only an issue in service-sector jobs.
Analysts who had to work long hours when the strong rebound caught employers who’d
slowed hiring o�-guard may also be ready to seek a better balance.
The reassessment of life and career choices that we have been hearing so much about may
also keep quits elevated in the coming months. Twenty-two percent of American workers —
and 30 percent of those younger than 40 — have considered changing their occupation or
�eld of work since the pandemic began, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll
from July.
And the return to o�ce could expose new mismatches between employers and employees.
Some workers who want to work remotely may �nd policies mandating a return to in
person. A recent survey found that 17 percent of those working remotely during the
pandemic would consider looking for another job if required to return. Others who are
excited to return to the workplace may �nd their o�ces moving to remote. Those who
moved to a new location during the pandemic may �nd even hybrid work impractical.
Vaccine mandates may play a role too. People who won’t get vaccinated will �nd
themselves required to �nd a new job; others may seek out a new employer that is willing
to provide that guarantee.
What are the implications of the quits rate remaining elevated and potentially spreading
further into professional and managerial roles? Employers, including those who have thus
far been relatively immune, will want to prioritize investments that strengthen employees’
connections to the �rm, its culture, and each other to minimize the risk of seeing their own
wave of resignations.
For the economy as a whole, it could mean in�ationary and productivity pressures.
A higher job switching rate suggests higher future wage growth. Workers switching jobs
tend to command a wage premium. For example, job switchers saw 4.1 percent median
wage growth in August, while job stayers saw a more modest 3.1 percent. Over time, even
job stayers can see wage growth as employers become more concerned about attrition.
To maintain margins, employers turn to productivity improvements and price hikes.
We have seen this at lower levels of pay. For example, the adoption of QR code ordering
systems has enabled restaurants to reduce demands on sta�ng while CPI prices for
restaurants have increased to levels not seen since the 1980s.
Thus far, wage pressure seems to be concentrated in lower levels of pay. But increased
churn among higher-paid workers could spark wage pressure in higher levels too. Pressure
across the wage ladder would mean higher wage bills for employers which could lead them
to pursue additional, perhaps larger, changes. And what does that potential for higher
labor costs, productivity investments and price hikes mean? It means those of us paying
close attention to our economic potential and in�ation need to watch who’s leaving jobs as
closely as we watch who’s taking them.
Levanon, Gad, and Frank Steemers, "Why Wages Are Growing Rapidly Now—And Will
Continue to in the Future." The Conference Board, August 20, 2021.
"Wage Growth Tracker." Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, August 2021.
Long, Heather, and Scott Clement. “Nearly a third of U.S. workers under 40 considered
changing careers during the pandemic.” The Washington Post, Aug. 16, 2021.
Ozimek, Adam. “The Great Resignation: From Full-Time to Freelance.” Upwork.
Birinci, Serdar. “Job Switching Rates during a Recession.” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis,
Aug. 19, 2021.
"Wage Growth Tracker.” Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, August 2021.
Employment and Labor Markets
Learn more about labor market trends in the latest Macro Minute blog post, which
asks if people are reconsidering the tradeo� between labor and leisure.
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APA
Tom Barkin (2021, September 9). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20210910_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20210910_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2021},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20210910_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}