The True Reflection of US Wage Growth and Corporate Profits
After the December employment data was released, mainstream voices either blamed AI automation or criticized tightening immigration policies. But these explanations all overlook a more painful reality.
Look at this set of data: By 2025, federal corporate income tax growth has already turned negative—declining by between 20% and 30%. Meanwhile, private sector wage growth has shrunk to below 0.5%. These two lines are moving downward in sync, a pattern only seen during the 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic.
Some say it's due to technological shocks, others blame policy tightening, but neither captures the core issue. What is the essence of corporate taxation? It’s a direct reflection of taxable profits. Tax = tax rate × profit. This logic is straightforward. When tax revenue declines without significant changes in tax rates, it can only mean one thing—corporate profits are collapsing.
The data is even more direct: nationwide corporate tax revenue has decreased by 9% to 10% year-over-year (states like Illinois and Florida are at this level), and private employment for the entire year has only increased by 584,000 (compared to 2 million in 2024). Core wages (excluding government, healthcare, hospitality, and other sectors) have actually shrunk by 164,000.
Hiring freezes and stagnant wages are not stories of technological substitution; they are clear signs of demand contraction. When companies can't make money, they naturally won't expand hiring. The logic is that simple.
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GateUser-2fce706c
· 01-10 15:46
I've already mentioned this, and the signals of this major recession have been there for three years. Those who only realize now are too late. Corporate profits are collapsing, and salaries are frozen. This is the trend, everyone. Opportunities like this don't come often, so you must quickly adjust your asset allocation.
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OldLeekConfession
· 01-10 05:54
Companies' profits have collapsed and they're still blaming AI and immigration? Ha, this kind of excuse really can fool people. The data is right here: salary increases are lagging, corporate taxes are declining sharply—basically, they just don't have money anymore.
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PoolJumper
· 01-10 05:53
Well... so basically, the company has no money left and is almost unable to pay salaries?
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LucidSleepwalker
· 01-10 05:51
The company's profits have collapsed, yet they're still blaming AI and immigration. It's hilarious—numbers don't lie.
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DataBartender
· 01-10 05:48
When corporate profits collapse like this, blaming AI or immigration is really bullshit. It's simply that there's no work left.
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PanicSeller
· 01-10 05:47
Corporate profits plummeted, salaries hit the floor... this is the real truth, much more reliable than AI replacement.
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ProposalDetective
· 01-10 05:33
So basically, the company has no money left, can't pay taxes, and how can they give employees a raise...
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StealthDeployer
· 01-10 05:28
Basically, it's just that companies have no money. Talking about AI and immigration is just a distraction.
The True Reflection of US Wage Growth and Corporate Profits
After the December employment data was released, mainstream voices either blamed AI automation or criticized tightening immigration policies. But these explanations all overlook a more painful reality.
Look at this set of data: By 2025, federal corporate income tax growth has already turned negative—declining by between 20% and 30%. Meanwhile, private sector wage growth has shrunk to below 0.5%. These two lines are moving downward in sync, a pattern only seen during the 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic.
Some say it's due to technological shocks, others blame policy tightening, but neither captures the core issue. What is the essence of corporate taxation? It’s a direct reflection of taxable profits. Tax = tax rate × profit. This logic is straightforward. When tax revenue declines without significant changes in tax rates, it can only mean one thing—corporate profits are collapsing.
The data is even more direct: nationwide corporate tax revenue has decreased by 9% to 10% year-over-year (states like Illinois and Florida are at this level), and private employment for the entire year has only increased by 584,000 (compared to 2 million in 2024). Core wages (excluding government, healthcare, hospitality, and other sectors) have actually shrunk by 164,000.
Hiring freezes and stagnant wages are not stories of technological substitution; they are clear signs of demand contraction. When companies can't make money, they naturally won't expand hiring. The logic is that simple.