Las Vegas
Hotel, Construction Jobs Pay More Than U.S. Average
Workers in a majority of
Las Vegas occupations earn more than the national
average wage for their fields, but valley earnings
still lag behind overall U.S. wages, according to
researchers responsible for a new occupational wage
index study.
The study -- authored by Las Vegas-based Applied
Analysis and Urban Environmental Research LLC --
shows that the average wage in Las Vegas is $33,590,
nearly 10 percent lower that the national average
of $37,020.
Jeremy Aguero, a principal with Applied Analysis,
said that the gap in overall wages does not consider
the area's concentration of construction and hospitality
jobs.
"The average wage may be lower, but the average
worker is making more than the average nationwide,"
he said. "If a worker moves here and works
in the hotel industry, that worker will make more
here."
He said the study shows that -- because of the
concentration of Las Vegas workers in those two
dominant industries -- 57.8 percent of the occupations
reporting wages in the Las Vegas area pay equal
or more than the national average.
While the study showed that management positions
in Las Vegas paid 97.5 percent of the national average,
food preparation and service jobs here paid 112.6
percent of the national average.
Similarly, legal professionals in Las Vegas earn
87.6 percent of the national average while construction
jobs pay 106.6 percent of the national average.
Las Vegas grounds keepers and maintenance workers
get 108.1 percent of the national average.
Las Vegas computer and mathematical professionals
make 78.5 percent of the national average.
Keith Schwer, a UNLV economist and director of
the Center for Business and Economic Development,
said the report's findings make sense.
One concern in the report is a relatively slow
rate of wage growth. Only 45.1 percent of the occupations
reporting had wage growth at or above the national
average. The figure was 58.1 percent in 2003 and
the current results tie the worst rate in the last
five years.
Given the recent spike in cost of living in the
Las Vegas Valley, pressure will increase for wages
to keep pace, Schwer and Aguero agreed.
"If (wages) don't, then the economic well-being
of workers in that industry will decline,"
Schwer said.
Aguero said wages should jump in next year's report.
"We are expecting to see some very substantial
increases in wages across every sector," he
said. "The cost of living has gone up, in particular
the cost of housing. With the unemployment rate
under 5 percent, that pressure is particularly strong."
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