Average earnings just £16 a week higher than 2010
Real average earnings are just £16 a week  higher than they were 14 years ago, according to research conducted by the  Resolution Foundation.
The think tank said that the UK's labour  market backdrop to the General Election is a prolonged pay squeeze that has  left real average wages today just £16 a week higher than in 2010. It stated  that this has been caused by three shocks to pay packets in little over a  decade, including the financial crisis, the Brexit referendum and the  cost-of-living crisis.
According to the Resolution Foundation, in the  14 years prior to the 2010 election, average real wages grew by £145 a week in  total.
Hannah Slaughter, Senior Economist at the  Resolution Foundation, said:
'Britain's prolonged pay depression has left  average earnings just £16 a week higher than they were back in 2010, despite  the welcome return of rising real wages in recent months.
'Worryingly, Britain's decade-long jobs boom  during the 2010s has also gone bust, with the UK one of only a handful of  countries where employment has yet to return to pre-pandemic levels.'
Internet  link: Resolution Foundation