With economy showing signs of improvement, labour market is still a major headache for the European policymakers. Hence, workers in the Eurozone are still suffering a drop in pay in real terms, as wage growth lags the rate of inflation. On Monday the Eurostat said workers' pay advanced 1.1% in the second quarter, from the corresponding period a year earlier, down from a 1.8% annual rate recorded in the prior quarter and the slowest pace since the third quarter of 2010. Meanwhile, consumer price growth decelerated to 1.3% annually in August, from 1.6% registered in July. The latest reading is still underneath the central bank's target area of a 2% target level. Despite weak figures, Eurozone authorities are expecting lower costs faced by companies will make exports more competitive, reducing some of the enormous gaps in wealth between Eurozone economies.