Business & Economy

On The Money: US workers see highest wage growth since 2008 | Fed releases plan to loosen rules for major US banks | GOP chair criticizes UK tech tax | US drops in World Bank’s list of best places to do business

Happy Halloween Wednesday and welcome back to On The Money. I’m Sylvan Lane, and here’s your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line.

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THE BIG DEALUS workers see highest wage growth since 2008: Pay for U.S. workers increased 0.9 percent from July to September, bumping yearly earnings growth to the highest level since the 2008 recession.

Wages and salaries for American workers in the private sector rose 0.8 percent over the past three months, while state and local government workers saw 0.9 percent more pay since July, according to data released Wednesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The uptick exceeded expectations from analysts and outpaced the 0.5-percent gain in pay between April and June of 2018. Wages and salaries have increased 2.9 percent on the year since September 2017, the fastest rate since September 2008. I break down the numbers here.

 

What comes next: The ADP national employment report, also released Wednesday, showed private businesses adding 227,000 jobs in October, beating economists’ expectations for an increase of 189,000. The Labor Department will release its jobs report on Friday.

LEADING THE DAY

Fed releases plan to loosen rules for major US banks: The Federal Reserve on Wednesday released a proposal to loosen rules on U.S. banks with less than $700 billion in assets, exempting dozens of firms from stricter federal oversight under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law.

The Fed’s proposal would create four tiers of regulation tailored to the size of a U.S. bank and its international operations. The plan does not reduce rules for the nine largest American firms, considered “globally systemically important banks” (GSIBs), but eases capital, liquidity and stress-testing requirements for some regional powerhouses.

The proposed rollback, eagerly awaited by the financial sector, comes five months after President Trump signed a bipartisan bill directing the Fed to loosen rules on banks with less than $250 billion in assets and consider looser oversight for firms above that threshold. I’ll walk you through the plan here.

 

Reactions:

 

US drops two spots in World Bank’s ranking of best places to do business: The U.S. dropped two spots in the World Bank’s annual ranking of the best places to do business in the world.

According to The Wall Street Journal, America fell to eighth place in the ranking, which measures the ease with which people can do business in a given country.

The U.S. scored 54th on its process of getting electricity and 50th on protections for small shareholders in businesses.

It also received poor marks for its 15-day process of registering property at 38th place and for its difficulty in paying taxes at 37th. While the U.S. dropped slightly, the top three ranked countries – New Zealand, Singapore, and Denmark – held their spots for the third year in a row. The Hill’s Megan Keller tells us more here.

 

GOOD TO KNOW

 

ODDS AND ENDS