Compensation growth slowed slightly in the third quarter of the year, signaling that the white-hot labor market is cooling off.
The latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics‘ Employment Cost Index (ECI) shows that compensation costs, including wages and benefits, rose 0.8% from June to September. While still an increase, it marks a deceleration from the 0.9% growth in the second quarter. On an annual basis, compensation was up 3.6% in September—down from 3.9% in June and 4.3% a year ago.
Experts note that the tapering aligns with broader inflation trends, which have also been on a downward trajectory after hitting 40-year highs earlier in 2024. The data reinforces other indicators of a gradual cool-down, with moderating salary growth across all civilian workers and benefit cost increases slowing among private employers.
The Numbers Behind the Slowdown
Wages and salaries increased 0.8% quarter- over-quarter, while benefit costs were up 0.8% in Q3—both a notch below last quarter’s 0.9% rise. Over the last 12 months, wage growth for state and local government employees has fallen from 4.9% to 4.7%.
Meanwhile, benefits cost increases slowed dramatically, from 3.9% year-over-year in Q3 2023 to just 3.3% in Q3 2024. Experts say budgeted 2025 salary increases may follow suit, projecting minimal upticks from this year’s actual raises.
The Federal Reserve watches indicators like ECI closely when deciding interest rates. For employers planning 2025 compensation, the data signals that the rapid pace of pay hikes over the past few years may be ending. Moderation could allow benefits budgets some relief as well after sharp cost jumps.
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