Everyday Economics: Working more, falling behind

Spread the love

This week’s data tells a clear story: Americans are earning more dollars that buy less. The economy looks fine on paper. It doesn’t feel fine at the kitchen table.

Housing starts. May was another disappointment for anyone betting on a stronger year for the housing market, and single-family construction looks set to keep falling. Yes, rates are a little lower than a year ago, and housing costs themselves have cooled. But that’s cold comfort when the price of everything else is climbing. Adjust for inflation and disposable income is shrinking. A slightly cheaper mortgage doesn’t go far when the rest of the budget is stretched thin. The sluggish housing market is likely to keep builders on the sidelines.

The cost of living. The average household spent $78,535 last year – about $6,545 a month. Over the past year, that basket got 4.2% more expensive. That’s the fastest pace in three years. And the pain lands exactly where families can’t dodge it: energy is up 23.5%, gas up a brutal 40.5%, groceries up 3.1%. (Airfare is up almost 27%, if you were still hoping to fly somewhere this summer.) Run the math and the typical household needs about $275 more a month – roughly $3,300 a year – just to buy what it bought a year ago. Lower-income families feel it most, because food and fuel eat up more of their paycheck and there’s less room to cut.

Are wages keeping up? Not really. Pay is up about 3.4% in dollar terms. Sounds good, until you subtract inflation. Once you do, the average hourly wage actually fell 0.8% over the year. More dollars, less stuff.

The Fed. Here’s the main event. Wednesday brings the first rate decision under new chair Kevin Warsh. A few months ago, the question was when the Fed would cut. With inflation pushing higher – driven by an energy shock from a longer-than-expected war in the Middle East – a cut is basically off the table.

So the Fed is stuck. Inflation is too hot to ease. The consumer is too tired to squeeze. Expect them to sit still; markets put the odds of no move at about 97%. Hiring actually picked up – 172,000 jobs in May – but wage growth keeps cooling, and a Fed that doesn’t see wages reigniting inflation can afford to wait and watch. If wages start to heat back up, hikes go from talk to real possibility. Investors already have one penciled in by year’s end. Without that, long-term rates probably hold and might even ease a bit, which would give mortgages and business loans a little breathing room.

Here’s the part that matters most for your household and your business: the forces doing the squeezing are mostly outside the Fed’s hands. Tariffs raise the cost of goods. A long war keeps gas prices up. Big deficits add pressure of their own. The Fed puts a floor on how low short-term interest rates can go. Upward pressure on rates leaves the Fed’s main tool a blunt instrument. The Fed can’t cut the price at the pump, undo a tariff, or end a war.

So don’t wait on this week’s rate decision to bail you out. The squeeze is coming from prices the Fed doesn’t control. Until energy costs settle and real wages climb back into positive territory, the gap between earning more and affording less is here to stay. Plan, budget and borrow with that in mind.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

lake land college.4

First Annual Laker Academic Invitational to be Held for Local High School Students

On Friday, February 6, Lake Land will host local high school students for the first-ever Laker Academic Invitational, a competitive event designed to challenge and recognize academic excellence. During the...
Clark County Graphic.5

Government Shutdown Causing Ambulance Billing Delays

Article Summary: The Clark County Ambulance Service is experiencing delays in Medicare and Medicaid billing due to the federal government shutdown.Ambulance Service Key Points: Billing for Medicare and Medicaid has been...
Everyday Economics: Fiscal reality meets Central Bank caution in week ahead

Everyday Economics: Fiscal reality meets Central Bank caution in week ahead

By Orphe DivounguyThe Center Square At Davos, Citadel CEO Ken Griffin pointed to Japan's bond selloff – where super-long yields surged and 40-year yields hit record highs – as an...
Tariff uncertainty here to stay regardless of Supreme Court ruling

Tariff uncertainty here to stay regardless of Supreme Court ruling

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Even as small businesses wait for the U.S. Supreme Court to rule on President Donald Trump's tariff authority, a supply chain expert says uncertainty around...
Nearly 1M without power as massive winter storm rages

Nearly 1M without power as massive winter storm rages

By The Center SquareThe Center Square Nearly a million American homes are without power as a massive winter storm sweeps the country. According to poweroutage.com, the most impacted areas are...
Walz deploys 1,500 National Guard troops in Twin Cities

Walz deploys 1,500 National Guard troops in Twin Cities

By J.D. DavidsonThe Center Square About 1,500 Minnesota National Guard troops went from standby to active following the second fatal shooting by federal agents in Minneapolis on Saturday. Gov. Tim...
Lake Land College.6

Epsilon Sigma Alpha Approved as New Student Organization

Lake Land College Board of Trustees Meeting | Dec. 8, 2025 Article Summary: The board officially recognized Epsilon Sigma Alpha (ESA) as a new student organization on campus. The group...
GOP looks to hold, expand U.S. House majority

GOP looks to hold, expand U.S. House majority

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Republican leadership have approved a rule change to allow the party to hold a midterm election convention. While plans for the midterm convention are not...
Noem defends fatal shooting of armed man in DHS confrontation

Noem defends fatal shooting of armed man in DHS confrontation

By Hayley FelandThe Center Square Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem defended the fatal shooting of a Minneapolis man by a Border Patrol agent as an act of self-defense...
Govt. funding process close to finish line as Senate preps for final vote

Govt. funding process close to finish line as Senate preps for final vote

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square The ball is in the U.S. Senate’s court to avert a government shutdown Jan. 30, with six fiscal year 2026 appropriations bills signed into law...
Trump threatens 100% tariffs on Canada over China deal

Trump threatens 100% tariffs on Canada over China deal

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump warned Canada that all its exports to the U.S. could face 100% tariffs if Canada finalizes a deal with China. Trump slammed...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: City of Casey for January 19, 2026

City of Casey Meeting | January 19, 2026 The Casey City Council met on Monday, January 19, 2026, to address a variety of community and administrative issues. Aside from banning...
Attorneys review Chicago Teachers Union audits following congressional request

Attorneys review Chicago Teachers Union audits following congressional request

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Chicago Teachers Union says it has complied with a U.S. House committee’s request to release financial...
DHS: ICE agent shoots, kills armed Minneapolis man; protests erupt

DHS: ICE agent shoots, kills armed Minneapolis man; protests erupt

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Federal agents shot and killed an armed man in Minneapolis Saturday morning, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said. "At 9:05 AM CT, as DHS...
'They deserve their story': Bill aims to open foster care files

‘They deserve their story’: Bill aims to open foster care files

By Cat Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers are moving to ensure families adopting children from the state’s foster care system receive...