Americans in the middle of the income ladder say the math still doesn’t work. A new quarterly survey finds that a majority feel paychecks are losing ground to prices, sharpening a pocketbook problem that has defined the past few years.
The survey reports that 68% of middle-income respondents say their income is not keeping up with costs. The finding lands as families juggle higher grocery bills, housing costs, and interest payments. It also arrives after inflation cooled from its 2022 peak but left a higher price level in its wake.
“Sixty-eight percent say their income isn’t keeping up with rising costs,” the survey found.
Table of Contents
ToggleWhy Prices Still Sting
Inflation surged in 2021 and 2022, then eased. But “eased” is not “erased.” Prices for staples like food, rent, and insurance reset higher and stayed there. Even if monthly inflation is lower, the new baseline strains budgets that rose more slowly.
Wage growth improved in many sectors during the tight labor market of 2021–2023. Yet those gains were uneven and often lagged spikes in essentials. For households living between paychecks, timing matters: rents adjust fast; salaries, not so much.
Where the Pressure Shows Up
Households are trimming non-essentials, delaying big purchases, and leaning on deals and coupons. Credit card balances have risen in recent years as families smoothed over shortfalls. Higher interest rates made that stopgap costlier.
- Food and housing remain the biggest budget stress points.
- Auto insurance and medical costs have added surprise strain.
- Debt servicing now eats a larger share of monthly income.
Some employers boosted base pay or offered one-time bonuses. Those steps help, but they do not always match recurring increases in rent or groceries. Workers outside fast-growing sectors see fewer raises and weaker bargaining power.
Competing Views on the Outlook
Economists split on what comes next. One camp argues that as inflation cools further, real wages should catch up. They point to steady hiring, improving productivity, and slower price growth in goods as reasons for relief.
Another camp warns that stubborn costs—especially housing and services—could keep families squeezed. If rent inflation remains sticky and borrowing costs stay high, paychecks may keep feeling smaller, even if headline inflation looks tame.
Consumers, for their part, sound wary. The survey’s top-line number signals that day-to-day experience is driving sentiment more than macro charts. People shop with receipts, not seasonally adjusted indexes.
Policy and Industry Responses
Policymakers watch these signals closely. Central bankers weigh inflation progress against the health of the job market. Rapid rate cuts could risk a price flare-up; slow cuts could prolong the squeeze on borrowers. It’s a narrow path.
States and cities have tried targeted relief, from tax rebates to transit discounts. The impact varies. Relief that fades after a year rarely fixes multi-year budget gaps.
Retailers are experimenting with “shrinkflation reversal,” price guarantees, and private-label expansions. Grocers highlight weekly loss leaders to keep traffic. Landlords offer concessions in some metro areas where new supply is coming online, though that help is uneven and heavily local.
What to Watch
Three threads will shape the next chapter. First, the trajectory of rent and insurance costs. These two items often make or break a budget. Second, wage growth in services, where most people work. Third, the pace of interest rate changes, which filters into mortgages, car loans, and credit cards.
Consumer behavior is the wild card. If shoppers keep trading down and delaying purchases, companies may respond with sharper discounts, nudging prices lower. If spending holds up, price relief could be slower.
For now, the headline is simple and sobering. A strong share of middle-income households still feels like they are running uphill on a moving sidewalk. Until pay and prices realign, that feeling will not fade.
The next few quarters will test whether easing inflation, steadier wages, and cautious policy can finally restore balance. Watch rent data, service-sector pay, and any shift in interest rates. Those dials will tell families whether they can stop stretching and start saving again.







