Everyday Economics: Working more, falling behind

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

Police Crime

Illinois State Police Investigating Fatal Officer-Involved Shooting in Bradley

Article Summary: The Illinois State Police is investigating a fatal officer-involved shooting that occurred after Bradley Police officers encountered an armed man during a mid-day well-being check. Bradley Officer-Involved Shooting...
Monee Car Fire

Fire Department Responds to Monee Car Fire

Monee firefighters responded to a car fire on Manhattan-Monee Road April 10th. No injuries were reported.
NL Fire

New Lenox Firefighters Extinguish Garage Fire, Rescue Pets on Somerset Court

Article Summary: The New Lenox Fire Protection District quickly contained a Friday morning garage fire on Somerset Court, preventing the blaze from spreading to the home's main living area and...
WCO-Capital Improvements & IT Apr 07 214

Will County Explores Multi-Million Dollar Downtown Joliet Consolidation and City Partnership

Will County Capital Improvements & IT Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Capital Improvements and IT Committee reviewed four sweeping architectural options to consolidate county...
will county board meeting.6

Will County Partners with LNS Development for Laraway Road Drainage Improvements in New Lenox

Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The county approved a cost-sharing agreement with a private developer to build shared stormwater management facilities...
Crete Monee School Board Graphic.2

Crete-Monee Awards Major Contracts for Middle School Flooring and District Landscaping

Crete-Monee School District 201-U Meeting | March 16, 2026 Article Summary: The Board of Education finalized nearly half a million dollars in new operational and infrastructure contracts, while also authorizing over...
Will County Board Graphic.03

Will County Hires LEAP HR Consulting for $12,000 Strategic Plan

Will County Board Meeting | March 19, 2026 Article Summary: Seeking to unify its vision and improve onboarding for new members, the Will County Board will launch a four-month strategic...
Screenshot 2026-04-10 at 1.52.12 PM

Monee Village Board Clashes Over Residential Tax Rebates and Historical Society Funding in FY2027 Budget Debate

Monee Village Board Meeting | April 8, 2026 Article Summary: The Monee Village Board delayed finalizing its Fiscal Year 2027 budget on Wednesday after trustees clashed over preserving a residential...
Will County Finance Logo

Will County Finalizes 2025 Tax Levy at $159.5 Million, Limiting Rate Drops

Briefs: Will County Board Finance Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Finance Committee reviewed the final 2025 tax levy extension numbers, which came in slightly...
Will County Board Graphic.02

Will County to Take Jurisdiction of Countyline Road Following $1.8 Million Agreement with Kankakee County

Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: Will County will absorb a 4.27-mile stretch of Countyline Road into its highway system, aided by...
will county board meeting.6

Will County Expands Narcan Distribution Amid Shifts in Opioid Overdose Demographics

Will County Public Health & Safety Committee Meeting | April 2, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Health Department is ramping up its opioid overdose prevention efforts by distributing more...
Police Crime

Additional Skeletal Remains Discovered at Mokena Property

Article Summary: Law enforcement officials have secured a property in Mokena for an extended search after a secondary sweep of the area revealed additional skeletal remains near the site where...

Friends of the Peotone Library to Host Annual Cash-Only Book Sale

Article Summary: The Friends of the Library will host their annual three-day book sale in late April, offering a cash-only selection of materials to the Peotone community. Peotone Book Sale...
Travis

Beecher Man Charged with 10 Felony Counts for Possession of Child Sex Abuse Material

Article Summary: A 45-year-old Beecher resident turned himself in to Will County Sheriff's deputies to face 10 felony counts related to the possession of child sexual abuse material following a...
solar panels photovoltaics in solar farm

Will County Legislative Committee Unanimously Backs Resolution Demanding Return of Local Solar Siting Control

Will County Board Legislative Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board Legislative Committee unanimously passed an amended resolution on Tuesday demanding the Illinois General Assembly...