While the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted millions of jobs and most businesses, many workers kept their jobs and their salaries—and some saw pay rise.

Median pay changed by 5% or less either way at about a third of S&P 500 companies. It rose by more than 5% at 184 companies, and fell by more than 5% at 125.

Those are among the revelations from a Wall Street Journal analysis of annual disclosures by 492 companies using data provided by MyLogIQ. To see the median pay at S&P 500 companies, search or sort the table toward the bottom of this article.

Nearly 140 companies in the S&P 500—including Netflix Inc. and railroad CSX Corp. —said their median worker was paid at least $100,000 last year. Four dozen, including Starbucks Corp. and Amazon.com Inc., said their median worker made less than $30,000 last year. The wages from those four companies were little changed from 2019.

Pay across the U.S. economy remains in flux in 2021, with tight job markets and rising wages in many areas, particularly for low-wage front-line workers. Here is a closer look at 2020’s data:

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

U.S., NATO say no signs Russia pulling back troops from near Ukraine

Meanwhile, in an apparent bid to back up its claims of a…

Apple, Amazon, Starbucks to Report in Packed Earnings Week

What to Read Next This post first appeared on wsj.com

Victims of Cyberattack on File-Transfer Tool Pile Up

The list of companies hit by a cyberattack on a widely used…

Ukraine hit with massive power outages as Russia targets the nation’s energy systems

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine faced widespread power outages Thursday as the country’s…