Colombia Urban Wages
Street scene in Leticia
Courtesy Lloyd W. Mansfield
Houseboat on the Amazon
Courtesy Lloyd W. Mansfield
In spite of some modest and erratic improvements in the
mid1960s , and again during the early 1970s, real wages for
unskilled
construction workers in Bogotá increased by less than 10
percent
during the 1960-77 period as a whole. From 1977 to 1979,
however,
they increased appreciably, although other data suggest
that these
gains may have been lost between 1978 and 1981.
The wages of blue-collar workers in manufacturing
jumped
abruptly between 1960 and 1963, accompanied by a smaller
increase
for white-collar workers. During the remainder of the
1960s, wages
for both types of workers showed modest gains, followed by
a loss
of these gains during the 1970-76 period and then an
upturn until
the end of the decade. Relative to their real wages at the
beginning of the 1970s, both blue- and white-collar
workers were
earning at a lower rate in 1981. If fringe benefits are
taken into
account, their situation appears to have improved during
1964-70
more than at other times and deteriorated less during
1970-76. Over
the long term, the pattern showed cyclical fluctuations
around a
flat trend.
Data confirm the sluggish growth of wages and total
earnings of
manufacturing workers since the late 1970s. The resulting
view that
the working class suffered, however, fails to distinguish
among
groups within the working class. Even in manufacturing,
the poorer,
unskilled worker did better than white-collar or skilled
workers.
Moreover, wages and total earnings increased faster in
smaller
enterprises. Despite the rapid per capita income growth
during the
1970s, the income of persons with jobs did not increase
much, and
those who were better off at the beginning of the decade
fared even
worse; conversely, those who had minimal remuneration at
the
beginning of the decade significantly improved their
situation.
In summary, according to the evidence from occupational
data,
during the 1970s poor agricultural workers and small
farmers
increased their shares of national income. Among urban
workers, the
poor and the unskilled did better than those employed in
skilled or
formal-sector occupations. Consumption of luxuries
indicated
substantial improvements in the position of the rich
relative to
the middle class. But the share of income going to the
middle class
fell.
Data as of December 1988
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