Lodi News-Sentinel

Fed study: Nearly half of U.S. households would struggle with unexpected $400 expense

- By Don Lee

WASHINGTON — Shedding light on the precarious economic state of many American families, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday that nearly half of U.S. households reported they would have trouble meeting emergency expenses of just $400.

In addition, the Fed found that 22 percent of workers were juggling two or more jobs last year, higher than what government jobs data would suggest. And nearly one out of three Americans said that they have no retirement savings or pension.

These findings were part of the Fed’s “Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. households in 2015.” Overall, the survey-based study said the financial health of families continued to show mild improvemen­t last year, with 69 percent of respondent­s saying they are “living comfortabl­y” or “doing OK.” That is up 4 percentage points from 2014 and up 6 points from 2013, when the survey began.

But those gains belie the wide gap among households based on difference­s in education, race and parental wealth — and the fragile nature of many households’ financial situation more than six years after the end of the Great Recession.

The Fed’s study found that 46 percent of adults either could not cover a $400 emergency expense or would have to sell something or borrow money to do so. Similarly, 46 percent of respondent­s who had a major medical cost last year said they have debt from that expense.

“There is little question that, on the whole, the financial well-being of Americans seems to have improved relative to the prior year and relative to the year before that,” the Fed researcher­s concluded. “However, the many pockets of consumers who display elevated levels of financial stress and who are at risk for financial disruption in the case of further economic hardships remain a concern.”

The report, based on a survey of more than 5,600 people conducted in October and November, covers a range of topics, including savings behavior, banking and credit access and education debt. And it provides a more detailed look at family pocketbook issues than what can be seen in government data with aggregate numbers and averages.

The report said that the well-being survey results had helped the Fed and other government officials to better understand consumer attitudes, and it will add to the body of research informing the central bank as it weighs policy decisions. The Fed, which raised short-term interest rates in December after keeping it near zero for seven years because of the deep recession and slow recovery, has hesitated to lift rates again this year amid an unsettled global economy and very low inflation at home.

The latest survey paints a generally brighter outlook for workers compared with the prior two years, consistent with the improvemen­t in the job market as unemployme­nt has fallen to 5 percent.

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