Difference between hourly wage and real GDP per hour worked?

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The discussion centers on the distinction between real GDP per hour worked and individual earnings. In 2008, the real GDP per hour worked was reported at $45.70, but this figure does not equate to the average wage earned by individuals. The conversation highlights that GDP measures national wealth based on production and the value of goods and services, rather than personal income. Historical context is provided with data from 1950, noting a labor force of 62 million workers and a GDP of $293.7 billion, alongside minimum and average wage figures. The disparity between wages is attributed to factors like experience, emphasizing that new workers typically earn less than their more experienced counterparts. The discussion seeks clarification on how GDP figures relate to individual earnings and standard of living metrics.
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In 2008 the real GDP per hour worked was $45.70? I don't think this means that the average person was making $45.70...

Here is that graph that contains this data:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/64325990/ECON%20102/Capture.PNG

Could someone please explain the difference?
 
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I did some similar work on this not too long ago using US nominal GDP.

In 1950 the labor force included 62,000,000 workers; produced a GDP of $293.7 billion; federal minimum wage was $0.75 per hour, however, the average hourly rate was $2.27 per hour.

Much of my analysis was done on minimum wage versus the average wage.

New workers will not earn near what experienced workers earned, so there will be discrepancies between the highest and lowest for various reasons. So experience is probably the biggest player between the min and the max.
 
theBEAST said:
In 2008 the real GDP per hour worked was $45.70? I don't think this means that the average person was making $45.70...

Here is that graph that contains this data:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/64325990/ECON%20102/Capture.PNG

Could someone please explain the difference?

GDP is not as measure of personal income but of the nations weath by its producion and worth of goods and services. While you can break it down into a per capita basis, which would then reflect more a standard of living.
 
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