US wage growth is finally outpacing inflation. Many Americans aren't feeling it.

Since inflation began its climb toward the stratosphere in spring 2021, David Hewitt’s paycheck has lagged far behind.

In June of last year, the gap between the two turned into a chasm. Hewitt’s pay as a university professor rose 1.5% from the prior year, a typical bump, even as consumer prices surged to a 40-year high of 9.1% year over year.

As their restaurant takeout bill ballooned from about $70 to $100, Hewitt, his wife and two kids cut their twice-weekly meal deliveries in half.

In August, however, inflation clocked in at 3.7%. Meanwhile, Hewitt is benefiting from a 3.5% pay raise late last year and looking forward to a bigger bump in the coming months after his faculty union and the University of Pittsburgh reach a new collective bargaining agreement. He’s also teaching an additional class to bring in extra cash.

David Hewitt
David Hewitt

So the Hewitts are ordering in more often, though they haven’t returned to their previous ritual.

“I’m not seeing the big changes in prices that happened last year,” Hewitt, 52, says. At the same time, he adds, “Prices aren’t going down.”

After trailing inflation for more than two years, average U.S. wage growth turned the tables in May, outpacing price increases, giving consumers more purchasing power and bolstering the economy. But while the development means Americans have a little more breathing room, most say they still haven’t caught up to the big run-up in prices and are spending warily, according to an exclusive Harris Poll survey for USA TODAY and interviews with workers.

U.S. workers are also grappling with high interest rates, the cutoff of COVID-related federal aid and return-to-office mandates that are boosting daily costs, like commuting and lunches out.

Whether or not pay hikes continue to top inflation and encourage Americans to spend at a healthy clip could help determine if the U.S. dodges a recession over the next year, says Gregory Daco, chief economist of EY-Parthenon.

Are wages keeping up with inflation?

Of the 52% of employees who got a raise the past year, 70% say it has eased their financial stress from inflation and allowed them to make additional purchases, according to the Harris Poll online survey of 2,076 adults conducted Sept. 8-10. About one-third said it let them comfortably afford electronics, household goods, experiences, discretionary purchases and investing.

“It’s really been the driving factor behind (consumer) spending the last six to eight months,” propping up purchases despite high inflation and interest rates, Daco says. That’s key because consumer spending makes up 70% of economic activity.