Employment Cost Index (ECI)

Employment Cost Index (ECI)

The Employment Cost Index (ECI) is a quarterly economic series published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics that details the growth of total employee compensation. The Employment Cost Index (ECI) is a quarterly economic series published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics that details the growth of total employee compensation. ECI is a lagging indicator; rising costs at this level speak to economic overheating that has already been visible at earlier points in the economic food chain (commodity costs, retail sales, gross domestic product), and suggest that some rise in inflation is inevitable. The Employment Cost Index is a BLS survey of employer payrolls conducted that measures the change in total employee compensation each quarter. The Employment Cost Index essentially measures the change in total employee compensation each quarter.

The Employment Cost Index is a BLS survey of employer payrolls conducted that measures the change in total employee compensation each quarter.

What Is Employment Cost Index (ECI)?

The Employment Cost Index (ECI) is a quarterly economic series published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics that details the growth of total employee compensation. The index is prepared and published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), a unit of the United States Department of Labor.

It tracks movement in the cost of labor, as measured by wages and benefits, at all levels of a company. The data is broken down by industry group, occupation, and union vs. non-union workers. The data is compiled through separate surveys of non-farm businesses (about 4,500 sampled) and state and local governments (about 1,000 sampled). The index has a base weighting of 100.

Wages track the amount employers pay in salaries and hourly labor while benefits measure a combination of health insurance, retirement plans and paid time off. Employees typically see their paychecks broken down into these two parts with a lion's share of the payment coming from wages. Employers use the index to evaluate the labor market and the amount of raises they can doll out each quarter.

The Employment Cost Index is a BLS survey of employer payrolls conducted that measures the change in total employee compensation each quarter.
It is used by a wide variety of stakeholders — economists, investors, employers — to track the state of the economy or set payscales for their employees.
It can be volatile when bonuses and periodic compensations are taken into account.

Understanding Employment Cost Index (ECI)

The Employment Cost Index essentially measures the change in total employee compensation each quarter. It is based on a survey of employer payrolls conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in the final month of each quarter. The idea is that wage pressure increases in lockstep with inflation because compensation tends to increase before companies hike prices for consumers.

Therefore, it is considered an inflationary tailwind when the Employment Cost Index exhibits a steepening trend line or a greater than expected increase for a given period. In addition, as inflation increases, yields and interest rates also rise, resulting in a decrease in bond prices.

Economists use the index to measure the change in labor costs and gauge the health of the economy. It shows how the cost of compensating employees change each passing quarter. An upward sloping trend generally represents a strong and growing economy. In other words, employers are passing on profits to their employees through wages and benefits.

Employee benefits are calculated as cost per hour worked across 21 benefits, ranging from Social Security to paid time off for holidays. The survey covers all occupation in the private economy, excluding farms and households, and the public sector, minus the Federal government. The BLS publishes estimates for each of these categories in addition to seasonally adjusted and non seasonally adjusted headline numbers.

Special Considerations

Businesses and the federal government use the index for two different reasons. Employers observe the index to make appropriate adjustments in pay and benefits over time. If the index jumps 2% from the previous year or quarter, an employer may be inclined to give workers an equivalent raise. In some cases, employers may receive a larger raise to attract the best talent. Government agencies, on the other hand, watch the benchmark index to gauge the health of the economy. It can inform officials when the economy is overheating or the state of wage growth.

Investors

The ECI is watched by investors largely for its inflationary insights. Wages represent the lion's share of the total cost for a company to produce a product or deliver a service in the marketplace. The relative percentage will vary by industry, making the data release valuable on an inter-industry level.

ECI is one of the main economic indicators used by the Federal Reserve to set monetary policy. Another benefit of the methodology used in the ECI is that wage changes that occur as a result of a shift in the occupational mix of workers can be captured here using a "basket of occupations" approach similar to that of the CPI. Results of the ECI are less likely to be affected by people shifting to lower or higher-paying jobs.

ECI is a lagging indicator; rising costs at this level speak to economic overheating that has already been visible at earlier points in the economic food chain (commodity costs, retail sales, gross domestic product), and suggest that some rise in inflation is inevitable.

This indicator can move the markets if it shows marked differences from street estimates. Rising compensation costs are usually passed on to consumers because they are such a large corporate expense.

The ECI is used as part of the formula that calculates productivity. Investors should always compare the ECI to total productivity figures, paying particular attention to relative rates within industries in which they have a stake.

Advantages of ECI:

Disadvantages of the ECI:

Related terms:

Average Industrial Wage

Average industrial wage refers to the mean hourly rate of pay for workforce members of a given geographical area, excluding farmworkers.  read more

Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) is a government agency that produces a range of data about the U.S. economy. read more

The Conference Board (CB)

The Conference Board (CB) is a not-for-profit research organization which distributes vital economic information to its peer-to-peer business members. read more

Consumer Price Index (CPI)

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) measures the average change in prices over time that consumers pay for a basket of goods and services. read more

Economics : Overview, Types, & Indicators

Economics is a branch of social science focused on the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. read more

Import and Export Price Indexes (MXP)

The import and export price indexes (MXP) measure the prices of non-military goods and services coming in and out of the U.S. read more

Inflation

Inflation is a decrease in the purchasing power of money, reflected in a general increase in the prices of goods and services in an economy. read more

Producer Price Index (PPI)

The producer price index (PPI) is a family of indexes that gauges the average fluctuation in selling prices received by domestic producers over time. read more

Social Security

Social Security is a federally run insurance program that provides benefits to many American retirees, their survivors, and workers who become disabled. read more

Unemployment

Unemployment is the term for when a person who is actively seeking a job is unable to find work. read more