Family Incomes Rise After Lull
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Family Incomes Rise After Lull
P2JW258000-6-A00100-1--------XA Washington Has to Defuse The National Debt Bomb IPHONE 7 TESTS NEW WATERS MITCH DANIELS OPINION | A13 PERSONAL JOURNAL | D1 ****** DJIA 18066.75 g 258.32 1.4% NASDAQ 5155.25 g 1.1% WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 ~ VOL. CCLXVIII NO. 63 STOXX 600 338.72 g 1.0% 10-YR. TREAS. g 18/32 , yield 1.732% OIL $44.90 g $1.39 HHHH $3.00 WSJ.com GOLD $1,319.00 g $2.00 Surge to post-recession high is fueled by lowearning households, broader jobs growth Business & Finance U come—the level at which half are above and half are below— rose 5.2%, or $2,798, to $56,516, from a year earlier, after adjusting for inflation, the Census Bureau said Tuesday. The increase was the largest annual gain recorded since the yearly survey of incomes began in 1967, though it didn’t fully close the gap left by last decade’s recessions. Median household incomes stood 1.6% shy of the 2007 level, before the last recession took its toll, and 2.4% below the all-time high reached in 1999. The figures show how several years of robust employment BY NICK TIMIRAOS AND JANET ADAMY .S. household income surged last year amid sustained job growth, following a long stretch of stagnant and declining earnings. A1 A surge in U.S. incomes last year delivered the first significant raise for the typical family after seven years of stagnant and declining earnings, the result of sustained job growth finally lifting a broad swath of American households. The median household in- Wells Fargo’s CEO defended the bank and the efforts it had taken to stop allegedly illegal sales practices across the company. A1, C1 EpiPen maker Mylan had the second-highest executive pay among all U.S. drug and biotech firms over the past five years. A1 growth, including 2.4 million people who gained full-time work last year, helped regain ground lost after an especially wrenching downturn, particularly for lower-income households. Longer hours, higher wages and lower inflation also have contributed to the improvement. One question now is whether a sustained upturn is under way, or whether these gains are likely to peter out as the economy nears full employment, especially given a continuing slide in measured worker productivity. “It has been a long slog from the depths of the Great Reces- sion, but things are finally starting to improve for many American households,” said Chris Christopher Jr., an economist at IHS Global Insight, a research firm. At the current pace, median household incomes could surpass their 2007 level next year, according to forecasts by IHS, concluding a lost decade for workers. The official poverty rate in 2015 was 13.5%, down from 14.8% in 2014, the Census rePlease see INCOME page A2 Earning More Inflation-adjusted median household income $60,000 55,000 50,000 40,000 1970 ’80 Heard: Rising incomes energize consumer spending.............. C12 Source: Census Bureau As public and congressional pressure mounted on Wells Fargo & Co. executives, its top two bankers had an explanation Tuesday for allegedly illegal sales practices across the company: It was employees’ fault. Chief Executive John Stumpf defended the firm and the efforts it had taken to stop the behavior, which included opening accounts for customers without permission. “There was no incentive to do bad things,” Mr. Stumpf said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. He called the conduct that led to last week’s settlement with federal and local authorities “not acceptable,” adding that the bank doesn’t “want one dime of income that’s not earned properly.” At the same time, the San Francisco bank said it would soon eliminate the practices at the center of the controversy: branch-level sales goals that encouraged employees to crosssell products to customers. Last week, Wells Fargo paid a $185 million fine to regulators, including the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, after findings that many accounts were falsified or forced on unsuspecting customers. Many of the employees felt pressure to sell customers multiple products or services—for example, home-equity lines to Please see WELLS page A2 Russian hackers stole Olympic athletes’ medical records, the World AntiDoping Agency said. A10 Iran threatened two American surveillance planes as they flew over the Strait of Hormuz, the U.S. said. A8 Philippine leader Duterte is seeking arms from Russia and China, signaling a shift from reliance on the U.S. A11 The administration plans to raise the number of refugees admitted to the U.S. to 110,000 in fiscal 2017. A2 Turkey asked the U.S. to detain a Muslim cleric whom Erdogan accuses of masterminding a coup. A9 Innovations In Energy The likelihood of a U.S. carbon tax or cap-and-trade program is greater than ever. Journal Report, R1-6 Journal Report.. R1-6 Opinion.............. A13-15 Property Report C6-8 Sports.......................... D6 U.S. News............. A2-3 Weather..................... B6 World News...... A8-11 EVAN VUCCI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Time Inc. named Battista CEO, continuing a shuffle of the top ranks at the firm. B1 Obama accused Trump of adopting Putin as a role model, in the president’s first solo appearance on the campaign trail. A4 Trump proposed new subsidies for child care, as well as paid maternity leave for workers who don’t have it. A6 ’10 BY EMILY GLAZER AND CHRISTINA REXRODE The Atlanta Fed’s Lockhart, considered by many a bellwether central-bank voice, will step down in February. A2 Syria’s regime is pressing a systematic effort to alter the country’s demographics and tighten Assad’s grip on power, U.N. officials and opposition figures said. A8 Israel hit artillery positions in Syria in what it said was a response to a shell that struck the Golan Heights. A8 ’00 Wells Boss Says Staff At Fault For Scams Samsung is facing growing consumer confusion and anger as it grapples with a recall of new smartphones. B1 World-Wide ’90 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Three ships in the charter fleet of troubled Hanjin are being sold in what appears to be the start of a fire sale. B1 General Motors said its Bolt electric car will travel 238 miles on a single charge. B3 2015 $56,516 +5.2% since 2014 45,000 Stocks and bonds slid, raising concerns that volatility could force sales by some hedge funds. The Dow fell 258.32 to 18066.75. C1, C4 Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, speaking at a rally Tuesday in Clive, Iowa, has changed the tone of his campaign. TRUMP, TEAM RECAST HIS IMAGE Nominee shifts from raucous rallies to ‘presidential’ appearances but still sometimes ad libs BY MONICA LANGLEY Donald Trump installed his third leadership team at a campaign low point on Aug. 16. The next day, his new managers at a meeting in his Trump Tower office in New York suggested the Republican Party nominee visit residents suffering in the Louisiana floods. Mr. Trump didn’t like the idea. Wouldn’t he look like he was pandering? he asked, according to advisers. And besides, he added, Louisiana wasn’t a swing state. Newly installed campaign chief exec- utive Stephen Bannon and campaign manager Kellyanne Conway told their new boss, basically, trust us. Mr. Trump needed to move away from a preoccupation with rallies and wall-towall TV interviews toward “moments,” in the new managers’ parlance, that showed him in TV newscasts as presidential, with a caring side. The approach would give Mr. Trump a break from the media replaying unattractive off-script comments and offputting tweets—including a few viewed as racist—that were helping widen the polling lead of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, they said. Be- This Israeli City Has Gone to the Dogs—Just Ask Its Hounded Cats i i i Tel Aviv’s 30,000 pooches get lavish perks while stray felines tell another tale BY RORY JONES AND NANCY SHEKTER-PORAT JAFFA, Israel—With the scoop of a net, stray-cat catcher Eyal Getenyo snared a black cat, hauled the catch to a nearby van and tried to lure a kitten into a cage with a can of Fancy Feast. He zoomed away with 11 strays. “If we waited a few more moments, we could have got three or four more,” says Mr. Getenyo, who interrupted the morning walk of a French bulldog. It watched the black cat’s capture and then strolled away > s Copyright 2016 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved YEN 102.56 Family Incomes Rise After Lull What’s News CONTENTS Business News. B2-4 Crossword................. B6 Election 2016.... A4-6 Global Finance........ C3 Heard on Street.. C12 In the Markets....... C4 EURO $1.1221 Stray cat with its nose in the air. It’s hard to be a cat in Tel Aviv-Jaffa, a city on Israel’s Mediterranean coast which considers itself the most dogfriendly place on the planet. With a population of about 432,000, the area is home to one dog per 14 residents, and the pooches have their own local beaches and parks. In July, the municipality invited dogs and their owners to a rooftop screening of the animated talking-animals movie, “The Secret Life of Pets.” Last month’s Kelaviv dog festival, a play on the word “kelev,” or “dog” in Hebrew, showcased local canine fashion designers and pet technology developers. Tel Aviv-Jaffa now plans to launch an app called DigiDog that will alert owners to dogfriendly events and offer discounts at dog-friendly stores. Please see CATS page A6 sides, President Barack Obama was away playing golf on an island vacation. Mr. Trump went to Louisiana the next day, Aug. 18, accompanied by running mate Mike Pence. The trip turned out successfully in Mr. Trump’s view, and cinched his ties with Mr. Bannon and Ms. Conway, shifting his campaign’s focus toward such events as a trip to a Detroit inner-city church, the meeting with Mexico’s president and a planned visit Wednesday to Flint, Mich., to speak with families hurt by Please see IMAGE page A6 CEO John Stumpf’s crisis cameo.............................................. C1 Election 2016.............................................. A4, A6 Selloff for Longest Treasurys Yield of 30-year U.S. Treasury 3.25% Jan. 1 Worries about global economy fuel new-year rush to U.S. Treasurys 3.00 Tuesday 2.47% LONG BONDS: The June 23 U.K. votes to leave European Union 2.75 July 8 Yields reach new low on foreign demand 2.50 2.25 2.00 1.75 Jan. Feb. March April May June July Aug. Sept. longest-term U.S. Treasury bonds are some of the biggest victims of the government-debt selloff in recent days. The yield on the 30-year bond is up 0.23 percentage point in last four trading days. C1 Source: WSJ Market Data Group EpiPen Maker Dispenses Outsize Pay BY MARK MAREMONT The drugmaker buffeted by the furor over hefty price increases on its lifesaving EpiPen had the second-highest executive compensation among all U.S. drug and biotech firms over the past five years, paying its top five managers a total of nearly $300 million, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. The big pay packages are unusual because of Mylan NV’s relatively small size in the U.S. drug industry, where it is No. 11 by revenue and No. 16 by market capitalization. Companies generally set their executive pay targets relative to peers in their own industry, with larger companies typically offering more gener- ous pay than smaller ones. Pay also varies somewhat with corporate performance. Mylan’s combined total of $292.1 million in pay for its top five executives over the five years ended last December outpaced that at industry rivals several times its size, according to the analysis, including Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer Please see MYLAN page A10