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The Average Worker Requires a $76,000 Salary to Take a New Job — an All-Time High

- Money, Getty Images
Money, Getty Images

Starting pay expectations are higher than ever previously recorded in the U.S., according to new survey findings showing that workers are demanding more in today’s competitive labor market.

The results of the New York Fed’s latest SCE labor market survey, fielded quarterly since 2014, found that the lowest offer U.S. workers would be willing to take for a new job hit a high of over $75,000 annually in March. The data suggests that workers’ price tags are increasing along with the rising cost of living — and the newfound bargaining power they’re finding in the workforce.

What the data says

The average reservation wage, or the lowest offer workers would accept to start a new job, clocked in at $75,811 a year. That’s $2,144 more than November 2022’s average reservation wage.

That's what workers wanted to be paid, though. The average full-time offer actually received increased from $59,834 in November to $62,088.

Why it’s important

Even as inflation cools, the cost of living is still much higher than both the Federal Reserve (and U.S. workers) would hope. As a result, it’s not surprising that overall, workers’ pay expectations keep increasing — data shows inflation has been outpacing wage growth, even though the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics says average hourly earnings increased 0.5% from March 2022 to March 2023.

But that’s likely not the only reason workers have high pay expectations.

Though the labor market isn’t as tight as last year, unemployment remains low — it hit 3.5% in March. Companies are still struggling to retain talent. New pay transparency laws that went into effect this year several states and major metropolitan areas, including New York City, have also forced many companies to make more attractive offers, giving workers yet another advantage.

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