The Federal Reserve has made it clear that in order to cut interest rates, it must see evidence that inflation is likely to reach and remain durably around 2%. In turn, that requires the rate of increase of prices in the large service sector to slow further. Services are labour intensive, so the evolution of labour costs is critical in judging the outlook for services prices.
This is one reason why the Fed is focused on labour market developments. The other reason is that it has as an explicit mandate to pursue “maximum employment.” In practice, it interprets this as the lowest level of unemployment that can be achieved without causing excessive wage growth.
To judge how tight the labour market is and the pressure on firms’ wage costs it is useful to look at the quit rate and the Employment Cost Index (ECI).
Employees quit their jobs when they have an outside job offer or when they think they are very likely to attract a new job offer. The quit rate can therefore be seen as a measure of the tightness of labour markets as perceived by workers.
The ECI measures the change in the hourly labour cost to employers and includes both the cost of wages and salaries and the cost of benefits. It is free from the effects of workers moving between occupations and industries.1 Such changes are important.2
The graph below shows the quit rate and annual change in the ECI.3