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March 2025 Volume 23, Number 3 | |||||
Wages Set to Reflect 2024 Levels as Labor Market Pressures EaseCompensation budgets are holding steady for 2025, even as concerns over talent attraction and retention ease. Employers plan to allocate similar salary increases as in 2024, according to expert projections. Pay Raises Remaining Consistent
Salary-increase budgets at U.S. employers are expected to stay close to 2024 levels, found Mercer’s 2025 Compensation Planning Survey. Participating organizations estimate hiking total compensation for nonunion staff by 3.7% on average—matching last year’s 3.8% rise. Meanwhile, merit increases should hit 3.3%, on par with 2024’s 3.3% bumps. Predictions Vary Slightly Projections from other experts indicate slight dips in 2025 raises versus 2024, albeit still robust historically. Payscale’s mid-2024 data showed U.S. employers budgeting 3.5% pay hikes on average next year—down from 2022 and 2023 amid cooling labor markets, but above the pre-pandemic 3% standard. Similarly, consultancy WTW recently forecasted American businesses allotting 3.7% average salary increases for 2025, versus 2024’s 3.8%.
Varies By Industry The survey found compensation budgets differing by sector. Tech employers expect above-average raises at 3.5% merit and 3.8% total. Healthcare services projected below-average bumps of 3% merit and 3.5% total. Causes For Steady Budgets
Experts cited cooling labor markets allowing businesses to maintain—rather than accelerate—pay investments next year. Mercer showed 36% of surveyed organizations struggling with attraction and retention lately, down 9 percentage points year-over-year and 17 points from 2022’s heights. Don’t Stall Pay Strategies While economic indicators may prompt slowing salary growth, experts warned against reversing recent progress. |
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