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Labor share

In economics, the wage share or labor share is the part of national income, or the income of a particular economic sector, allocated to wages (labor). It is related to the capital or profit share, the part of income going to capital,[1] which is also known as the KY ratio.[2] The labor share is a key indicator for the distribution of income.[3]

The wage share is countercyclical;[3]: 13  that is, it tends to fall when output increases and rise when output decreases. Despite fluctuating over the business cycle, the wage share was once thought to be stable, which Keynes described as "one of the most surprising, yet best-established facts in the whole range of economic statistics".[4] The wage share has declined in most developed countries since the 1980s.[5][6]

Definition[edit]

The wage share can be defined in various ways, but empirically it is usually defined as total labor compensation or labor costs over nominal GDP or gross value added.[3]


Often the capital share and labor share are assumed to sum to 100%, so that each can be deduced from the other. For example, the Bureau of Labor Statistics defines the labor share in a given sector (LS) as the ratio of labor compensation paid in that sector (C) to current dollar output (CU), i.e. LS = C / CU. The non-labor or capital share (NLS) is defined as 1 − LS.[7]


In Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Piketty described the accounting identity α = r × β as the 'first fundamental law of capitalism', where α represents the capital share, r is the rate of return on capital, and β is the capital to income ratio.[8] Piketty defined the wage share as 1 − α.[9]


Because the self-employed perform labor which is not rewarded with wages, the labor share may be underestimated in sectors with a high rate of self-employment. One approach is to assume the labor share of proprietors' income to be fixed.[10] The OECD and the Bureau of Labor Statistics adjust labor compensation by assuming that the self-employed have the same average wage as employees in the same sector.[3]: 2 

Factors of production

Factor shares

Compensation of employees

Measures of national income and output

Value added

Income distribution

Labor economics

Rate of exploitation

for OECD countries, 1995–2010, at OECD.Stat

Labour Income Share Ratios

Michael D. Giandrea and Shawn Sprague. Estimating the U.S. labor share. , Feb 2017, https://doi.org/10.21916/mlr.2017.7

Monthly Labor Review