Higher-Income Americans Face Growing Payment Difficulties Amidst Rising Costs

https://newsletter.tf/americans-pay-bills-difficulty-costs/

Higher costs mean more Americans, including those with good incomes, are finding it hard to pay their bills on time.

#CostOfLiving, #AmericanEconomy, #FinancialStruggle, #RisingPrices, #DebtPayments

More Americans Finding It Hard to Pay Bills

Many Americans, even those with higher incomes, are finding it harder to pay their bills. Costs for things like housing and healthcare are rising, making it difficult to keep up with payments for credit cards and car loans.

https://newsletter.tf/americans-pay-bills-difficulty-costs/

#CostOfLiving, #AmericanEconomy, #FinancialStruggle, #RisingPrices, #DebtPayments

More Americans Finding It Hard to Pay Bills

Even people with good jobs are struggling to pay bills like credit cards and car loans. Costs are going up faster than paychecks.

New Video: Greg Bovino Brings Fascist Caricature to Life. Welcome to Minnesota 2026... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-m3Teh687OA #UpdateExtra #USPolitics #Geopolitics #RepublicanParty #AmericanEconomy #ForeignPolicy

The Biggest Threat to the 2026 Economy Is Still Donald Trump – The New Yorker

The Financial Page

The Biggest Threat to the 2026 Economy Is Still Donald Trump

Many analysts are predicting an election-year upturn, but they aren’t accounting for the President’s ability to cause more chaos.

By John Cassidy, December 22, 2025

You’re reading The Financial Page, John Cassidy’s weekly column on economics and politics.

In a prime-time address from the Oval Office last week, Donald Trump said, “We are poised for an economic boom the likes of which the world has never seen.” This was the sort of bloviating that has convinced many voters he’s hopelessly out of touch, but it did raise the question of how the economy is likely to perform in 2026, a midterm-election year. Given the data fog that the government shutdown created, the old joke applies more than ever: it’s difficult to make predictions, especially about the future. But some things seem reasonably clear.

Right now, the economy is working in the Democrats’ favor. Concerns about affordability have refused to abate: the latest weekly poll by YouGov/The Economist indicates that Americans still consider “inflation/prices” to be the most important policy issue, and just a third of them approve of how Trump is handling it. Meanwhile, it looks like G.D.P. growth for 2025 will come in at about two per cent—one percentage point lower than it was in the last two years of the Biden Administration—and the unemployment rate is ticking up. When Joe Biden left office, it was four per cent; now it is 4.6 per cent.

Still, November is a long way away, and observers outside the Oval Office, including Jerome Powell and his colleagues at the Fed, have been raising their estimates of how the economy might perform in the New Year. “Fiscal policy is going to be supportive. And, as I mentioned, A.I. spending will continue,” Powell said at a press conference earlier this month. “The consumer continues to spend. So, it looks like the baseline will be solid growth next year.” Many economists on Wall Street concur. In releasing its global outlook for 2026 last week, Goldman Sachs upped its prediction for U.S. growth to 2.6 per cent: “The US is likely to outperform substantially . . . because of reduced tariff drag, tax cuts, and easier financial conditions.”

The A.I. boom certainly can’t be dismissed. According to analysts at Barclays, about half of all the G.D.P. growth in 2025 stemmed from “spending on data centers, chips, power grids, networking equipment and other AI-related capital expenditure.” Going into 2026, corporate investment in A.I. shows no signs of slacking. The Fed likely isn’t done cutting interest rates, and come next April and beyond, tax refunds stemming from the budget-busting One Big Beautiful Bill Act will also be material: according to the Tax Foundation, they will average about three hundred to a thousand dollars more than usual per household. Other things being equal, the refunds will likely give a boost to consumer spending.

With Trump in the Oval Office, however, other things are rarely equal. Disruption is his essence. A big reason for G.D.P. growth slowing this year and prices remaining stubbornly high is that Trump’s ever-changing tariff policies created an enormous amount of uncertainty and raised the cost of imported goods.

When economists talk of tariff relief, they are assuming that things will be more settled in 2026—but will they? Some businesses are still in the process of passing along the tariff hikes to consumers. The Supreme Court could well rule that Trump’s blanket levies, which he introduced using emergency powers, are illegal, but that wouldn’t necessarily be the end of them. The Administration would surely try to rejigger the levies using different legal authorities, which create another round of anxiety and uncertainty for businesses, particularly small businesses.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The Biggest Threat to the 2026 Economy Is Still Donald Trump | The New Yorker

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The Realities of Minimum Wage

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Higher income Americans drive bigger share of consumer spending

It could make the economy more vulnerable.

Economist Richard Wolff WARNS ECONOMIC APOCALYPSE is Near

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Democrats erupt over “illegal” Trump move to fire Fed’s Lisa Cook – Axios

President Trump in the Oval Office on Aug. 22. Photo: Chip Somodevilla / Getty ImagesFrom article…

Democratic Congress members responded with fury on Monday after President Trump said he’s firing Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook.

Why it matters: Some lawmakers are calling on the federal judiciary to swiftly strike down Cook’s ouster, arguing that the president has no legal basis for it.

  • “It’s an authoritarian power grab that blatantly violates the Federal Reserve Act, and must be overturned in court,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, in a statement.
  • House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said: “Trump is trying to remove her without a shred of credible evidence that she has done anything wrong.”
  • House Judiciary Committee ranking member Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) told Axios: “What an outrage and a scandal. This is the big one constitutionally.”

What happened: Trump said in a letter posted to social media that Cook was “removed” from her position, “effective immediately,” citing Article II of the Constitution and the Federal Reserve Act of 1913.

  • The Federal Reserve Act allows a president to fire a governor for cause, but it has never happened before and its legality is murky, Axios’ Courtenay Brown and Neil Irwin reported.
  • Trump pointed to claims by Federal Housing Finance Agency William Pulte that Cook listed two primary residences in mortgage applications before becoming a Fed governor, which he referred to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution.
  • Cook has not responded to the allegations beyond saying last week she had “no intention of being bullied to step down from my position because of some questions raised in a tweet” and was “gathering the accurate information to answer any legitimate questions and provide the facts.”

Between the lines: Trump’s move comes after he spent weeks hammering the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates.

  • Trump has accused Fed chair Jerome Powell of stifling economic growth by keeping rates steady.
  • Cook’s firing is one of several unprecedented steps Trump has taken to try to force federal agencies to present a sunnier economic picture, including firing the Bureau of Labor Statistics chief earlier this month. 

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Democrats erupt over “illegal” Trump move to fire Fed’s Lisa Cook

See also: https://www.axios.com/2025/08/26/trump-fires-federal-reserve-lisa-cook

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