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US: Employment Cost Index
| Consensus | Consensus Range | Actual | Previous | |
| Quarter over Quarter | 0.9% | 0.8% to 1.0% | 0.9% | 0.9% |
| Year over Year | 3.6% | 3.8% |
Highlights
Employment costs are up 0.9 percent in Q1 from Q4, matching expectations. On year, costs are up 3.6 percent. That follows unrevised increases on quarter of 0.9 percent and 3.8 percent on year for Q4 from Q3.
For Q1, wages and salaries are up 0.8 percent and benefit costs increased 1.2 percent from December 2024. Benefit costs are up 3.8 percent for the year ending in March 2025.
Market Consensus Before Announcement
Employment costs are seen rising at the same 0.9 percent rate in Q1 after rising 0.9 percent in Q4 on quarter.
Definition
A measure of total employee compensation costs: wages and salaries as well as benefits. The employment cost index (ECI) is the broadest measure of labor costs.
Description
The employment cost index is an easy way to evaluate wage trends and the risk of wage inflation. Wage inflation is high on the Federal Reserve's enemy list. Fed officials are always on the lookout for the prospects of inflationary pressures. Wage pressures tend to percolate when economic activity is booming and the demand for labor is rising rapidly. During economic downturns, wage pressures tend to be subdued because labor demand is down.
By tracking labor costs, investors can gain a sense of whether businesses will feel the need to raise prices. If wage inflation threatens, it's a good bet that interest rates will rise, bond and stock prices will fall, and the only investors in a good mood will be the ones who tracked the employment cost index and adjusted their portfolios to anticipate these events.