Lodi News-Sentinel

More Americans struggling with their finances, Fed survey shows

- Reade Pickert, Alex Tanzi

Increasing numbers of Americans say they are struggling with their finances, according to a new Federal Reserve report revealing the toll that inflation has taken on U.S. households over the past year.

Some 73% of adults were “doing at least OK financiall­y” as of October, down five percentage points from a year earlier and among the lowest levels since 2016, the central bank’s annual Survey of Household Economics and Decisionma­king, published Monday, showed.

The survey examines the financial situation of more than 11,000 adults and their families in the U.S. The inflation rate surged to a 40-year high in mid-2022, squeezing American households to a degree that hadn’t been seen since the 1980s. Since then, inflation has receded, though it remains well the above pre-pandemic pace.

“Overall, the report shows that higher prices have negatively affected most households and overall financial well-being declined over the prior year, though workers continued to benefit from a strong labor market,” the Fed said in a statement accompanyi­ng the release.

Nearly a quarter of respondent­s said that while their spending had increased in 2022, their incomes had not. Roughly two-thirds said they stopped using a product or used less of it because of higher prices, while 51% noted they reduced their savings. About 28% reported going without some form of medical care in the last year because they couldn’t afford it.

All racial and ethnic groups polled in the survey saw a decline in financial well-being from a year earlier. And among income groups, those earning $25,000-$99,999 saw the largest declines in well-being. Only 65% of adults identifyin­g as LGBTQ+ said they were doing at least OK financiall­y, well below the 75% share for those not identifyin­g as LGBTQ+.

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