By the way, Marx literally predicted wages stagnating even as production increases. I’ve also added some other benchmarks to help gauge where earners would stand given how much they currently earn.
25k in 2020-> 57k
35k in 2020-> 80k
45k in 2020-> 103k
50k in 2020-> 108k
75k in 2020-> 172k
100k in 2020-> 229k
The oil price shock is what triggered the era of neoliberalism in order to prevent that from ever happening again. The end of the gold standard also played a role.
What @truth said below is a much more elaborate comment than mine and is very accurate.
It’s that the oil price shocks shook the existing system from a profitability and inflationary standpoint and in order to bring in higher levels of growth increased globalization became necessary. Part of that involved things like ending the gold standard, and pushing for neoliberalism which expanded economies of scale that benefited large enterprises over small ones. The end of small business that slowly followed this is really what resulted in the change in productivity wage curve as the market for hiring employees became looser.