BLS: Compensation Costs for Civilian Workers Rise 1.2% in Q1 2023, Annual Increase at 4.8%

Wages and salaries and benefit costs rose by 1.2% from December 2022 - Andrey Popov via Canva
Wages and salaries and benefit costs rose by 1.2% from December 2022 - Andrey Popov via Canva
0Comments

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that compensation costs for civilian workers increased by 1.2% for the three-month period ending in March 2023. Both wages and salaries and benefit costs rose by 1.2% from December 2022. Over the 12-month period ending in March 2023, compensation costs increased by 4.8%, with wages and salaries rising by 5.0% and benefit costs by 4.5%. In comparison, in March 2022, compensation costs had increased by 4.5%, with wages and salaries growing by 4.7% and benefit costs by 4.1%.

For private industry workers, compensation costs increased by 4.8% over the year. Wages and salaries rose by 5.1% for the 12-month period ending in March 2023, while the cost of benefits grew by 4.3%. Inflation-adjusted private wages and salaries saw a slight increase of 0.1% for the 12 months ending March 2023, but inflation-adjusted benefit costs in the private sector declined by 0.6%.

Among private industry occupational groups, the compensation cost increase for the 12-month period ending in March 2023 ranged from 4.3% for management, professional, and related occupations and natural resources, construction, and maintenance occupations, to 6.0% for service occupations. Within industry supersectors, compensation cost increases ranged from 4.2% for manufacturing to 5.9% for leisure and hospitality.

For state and local government workers, compensation costs rose by 4.9% for the 12-month period ending in March 2023, compared to a 3.2% increase in March 2022. Wages and salaries increased by 4.7% for the 12-month period ending in March 2023, while benefit costs grew by 5.0%.



Related

Silvan Frank, LongtermTrends GmbH

M2 money supply reaches $22.5 trillion with 4.59% growth and 2.41% inflation rate

LongtermTrends GmbH reports that as of Feb. 2, the U.S. M2 money supply stands at $22.5 trillion with a 4.59% annual growth rate and an inflation rate of 2.41%.

Rachel Che, Founder and CEO @MacroMicro

MacroMicro releases latest global M2 money supply data from major central banks

MacroMicro has published new data on global M2 money supply from four major central banks.

Neven Valev, TheGlobalEconomy

U.S. money supply reaches record high in November 2025

The U.S. broad money supply hit a new record in November 2025 at over $22 trillion, according to The Federal Reserve System data reported by TheGlobalEconomy.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Fiat Reporter.