Post-Tribune

Inflation widening wedge between haves, have-nots

For poor Americans, struggle growing just to make ends meet

- By Anne D’Innocenzio and Christophe­r Rugaber

NEW YORK — Americans at the low end of the income rung are once again struggling to make ends meet.

A confluence of factors — the expiration of federal stimulus checks and surging inflation on staples like gas and food — are driving an even bigger wedge between the haves and have-nots.

While wealthier shoppers continue to splurge, low-income shoppers have pulled back faster than expected in the past two months. They’re focusing on necessitie­s while turning to cheaper items or less expensive stores. And they’re buying only a little at a time.

It’s a reversal from a year or so ago when low-income shoppers, flush with money from the government and buoyed by wage increases, were able to spend more freely.

Kisha Galvan, a 44-yearold mother of eight children from ages 9 to 27, was able to stock up on groceries for the week and buy extras like clothing and shoes at Walmart for her children last year.

But without the pandemic-related government support and inflation at a near 40-year high, she is buying more canned food and depending on the local food pantry several times a week instead of once a week.

“I shop meal to meal,” said the Rockford, Illinois, resident who has lived on disability for the past 15 years. “Before, we didn’t have to worry about what we were going to get. We just go get it.”

The divide in spending was reflected in the latest round of quarterly earnings for retailers.

At the high end of the spectrum, Nordstrom and Ralph Lauren reported stronger-than-expected sales as their well-heeled shoppers returned to pre-pandemic routines. Lululemon also reported strong quarterly sales of its pricey athletic wear.

But on the other end, Walmart’s customers are switching to cheaper lunch meats and half gallons of milk from full gallons. Kohl’s, a mid-priced department store, said its customers were spending less on each visit. And Gap slashed its annual financial outlook, specifical­ly citing the strain from inflation at its low-price Old Navy chain.

Both Dollar Tree and Dollar General, which historical­ly benefit from shoppers trading down during difficult economic times, raised their sales outlooks last month. Meanwhile, discounter Big Lots suffered steep sales declines in the latest quarter.

“We are now in a new chapter where high inflation is greatly limiting the ability of consumers to make discretion­ary purchases, especially of high ticket items,” Big Lots CEO and President Bruce Thorn told analysts late last month. “We know that many Americans now are once again living paycheck-to-paycheck.”

The pullback among low-income shoppers has not affected overall spending, which is still up.

In April, the government said retail sales outpaced inflation for a fourth consecutiv­e month, a reassuring sign that consumers — the primary drivers of America’s economy — are still providing vital support and helping ease concerns that a recession might be near.

But analysts believe even affluent shoppers could retrench if the stock market continues to weaken.

Marshal Cohen, chief industry adviser at market research firm The NPD Group Inc., said the stock market affects higher income shoppers “psychologi­cally” and more losses on paper could make them cut back.

The spending mood has shifted from last October and November, when the Fed conducted a survey and found that almost eight in 10 adults were “doing okay or living comfortabl­y” when it came to their finances in 2021, the highest proportion to say so since the survey began in 2013.

For those earning less than $25,000, the proportion that said they were doing at least “OK” jumped to 53% from 40%.

But inflation has taken a bigger bite out of personal budgets and wiped away some of the wage gains, especially for those who earn less.

The national average cost of a gallon of gas, for example, has jumped to $4.76 from $4.20 a month ago and a painful 56% from a year earlier, according to AAA.

At the Northern Illinois Food Bank, which feeds people in 13 counties including Galvan and her family, the average monthly number of visits grew to more than 400,000 in the February through April period, from 311,000 in the July through September period, according to president and CEO Julie Yurko.

Across the economy, median wages jumped 6% in April from a year earlier, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. But even though that was the largest increase since 1990, it was still below the inflation rate of 8.3%.

 ?? HALEY OVERBEEK/NORTHERN ILLINOIS FOOD BANK ?? Kisha Galvan and her grandchild­ren stock up on food items last month from the Northern Illinois Food Bank in Rockford, Ill.
HALEY OVERBEEK/NORTHERN ILLINOIS FOOD BANK Kisha Galvan and her grandchild­ren stock up on food items last month from the Northern Illinois Food Bank in Rockford, Ill.

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