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A now-hiring sign hangs in the window of a CVS store in San Francisco on June 7, 2019.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Growth of U.S. labour costs was not as robust as initially thought in the third quarter, suggesting inflation could remain tame in the near term.

The sharp downward revision to labour costs, reported by the Labor Department on Tuesday, also pointed to some easing of the squeeze on profit margins. Corporate profits have been reduced by strong labour cost growth that has outpaced revenue. With worker productivity still sluggish, however, the pace of growth in labour costs is likely to remain solid.

“This is certainly good news for companies’ profit margins which have been under pressure,” said Lydia Boussour, a senior economist at Oxford Economics in New York. “However, slower productivity growth and steady compensation growth will keep upward pressure on unit labour costs going forward.”

Unit labour costs, the price of labour per single unit of output, increased at a 2.5 per cent annualized rate in the third quarter. They were previously reported to have advanced at a 3.6 per cent rate. Compared with the third quarter of 2018, labour costs grew at a 2.2 per cent rate, rather than the previously estimated 3.1 per cent.

Growth in hourly compensation was also revised lower, to a 2.3 per cent rate in the third quarter, from the originally reported 3.3 per cent pace. Hourly compensation grew at a 3.7 per cent rate compared with the third quarter of 2018, instead of the previously reported 4.5 per cent pace.

Last quarter’s gains in unit labour costs and compensation are in line with other measures showing moderate wage gains. A survey of small businesses on Tuesday showed the share of owners raising wages was unchanged in November. While the proportion of those planning to increase compensation rose to near a 30-year high, there was no strong appetite to increase prices.

These developments indicate inflation will probably continue to run below the Federal Reserve’s 2 per cent target.

“That is about the same as the pace of inflation and indicates stable inflation,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics in White Plains, New York.

Fed officials started a two-day policy meeting on Tuesday.

The central bank is not expected to cut interest rates on Wednesday against the backdrop of relatively upbeat economic data, including a sharp narrowing in the trade deficit in October, a rebound in orders for big-ticket items and a surge in job growth in November.

The Fed cut rates in October for the third time this year, but signalled a pause in the easing cycle that started in July when it reduced borrowing costs for the first time since 2008.

The central bank’s preferred inflation measure increased 1.6 per cent in the 12 months through October, slowing from 1.7 per cent in September. November data will be published later this month.

The government reported last month that after-tax profits without inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustment, which corresponds to S&P 500 profits, decreased $11.3-billion, or at a rate of 0.6 per cent in the third quarter. Profits were down at a rate of 0.4 per cent compared with the third quarter of 2018.

The dollar slipped against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury prices fell, while stocks on Wall Street were mixed.

PRODUCTIVITY MISMEASURED?

The government also confirmed that worker productivity fell by the most in nearly four years in the third quarter as a rebound in hours, driven by a surge in the volatile self-employed and unpaid family workers component, outpaced output.

Nonfarm productivity, which measures hourly output per worker, decreased at a 0.2 per cent rate in the last quarter, the biggest drop since the fourth quarter of 2015. Productivity was previously reported to have declined at a 0.3 per cent pace in the July-September quarter.

Productivity grew at an unrevised 2.5 per cent rate in the second quarter. Hours worked increased at a 2.5 per cent rate last quarter.

The government last month revised up third-quarter gross domestic product growth to a 2.1 per cent rate from a 1.9 per cent pace.

Compared with the third quarter of 2018, productivity increased at a 1.5 per cent rate, instead of the previously reported 1.4 per cent pace. Tepid productivity suggests the economy is unlikely to achieve the Trump administration’s goal of 3 per cent annual growth.

Productivity grew at an average annual rate of 1.3 per cent from 2007 to 2018, below its long-term rate of 2.1 per cent from 1947 to 2018, indicating that the speed at which the economy can expand over a long period without igniting inflation has slowed.

Sluggish productivity has been blamed on a range of factors, including a shortage of workers, low capital expenditure and inaccurate measurement on the information technology side.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said in October the U.S. central bank was “carefully assessing the implications of possibly mismeasured productivity gains.”

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