Country comparison

Average Weekly Earnings / Wages by Country

Wages — average hourly earnings (US), average weekly earnings (UK, AU), wage price index (AU), and labour cost indices in the eurozone — measure the pace at which pay is rising across the economy. They are the primary feedstock for services inflation.

Why compare Average Weekly Earnings / Wages across countries?

Wage growth is the single most important variable for services inflation, which is the stickiest component of CPI. Central banks need to see wages slowing toward levels consistent with the inflation target before they cut decisively. Sustained above-target wage growth therefore supports the currency through a more hawkish reaction function.

How to read the country list

Compare year-over-year wage growth to the central bank's implicit comfort zone (often around 3-3.5 percent for 2 percent inflation targets, depending on productivity). Real wages (nominal minus inflation) matter for consumer spending power.

Supported countries

Filter by country, currency, source, cadence, or unit.

Country / Currency Frequency Unit Source History Links
Australia
AUD / Australian Dollar
Quarterly %YoY ABS History from 2010-03-31 (16.2 years)
Denmark
DKK / Danish Krone
Quarterly %YoY Statistics Denmark Coverage metadata updating
Sweden
SEK / Swedish Krona
Monthly %YoY Statistics Sweden Coverage metadata updating
United States
USD / US Dollar
Monthly %YoY BLS Coverage metadata updating