Blame your boss, not China, for stagnant wages

By Tom Miles
Updated December 5 2014 - 12:08pm, first published 11:08am
Please, sir, I want some more: Bosses have kept wages low to hold on to profitability levels that have recovered from the GFC. Photo: Louie Douvis
Please, sir, I want some more: Bosses have kept wages low to hold on to profitability levels that have recovered from the GFC. Photo: Louie Douvis
Please, sir, I want some more: Bosses have kept wages low to hold on to profitability levels that have recovered from the GFC. Photo: Louie Douvis
Please, sir, I want some more: Bosses have kept wages low to hold on to profitability levels that have recovered from the GFC. Photo: Louie Douvis
Please, sir, I want some more: Bosses have kept wages low to hold on to profitability levels that have recovered from the GFC. Photo: Louie Douvis
Please, sir, I want some more: Bosses have kept wages low to hold on to profitability levels that have recovered from the GFC. Photo: Louie Douvis
Please, sir, I want some more: Bosses have kept wages low to hold on to profitability levels that have recovered from the GFC. Photo: Louie Douvis
Please, sir, I want some more: Bosses have kept wages low to hold on to profitability levels that have recovered from the GFC. Photo: Louie Douvis

Stagnant wage growth in rich countries is a result of corporate penny-pinching and not competition from cheap Chinese labour, the International Labour Organisation said on Friday.

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