‘No social life, no plans, no savings’: Americans aren’t reaping benefits of booming US economy
<span>Experts say the US economy is the ‘envy of the world’, but Americans are not feeling it.</span><span>Illustration: Marcus Peabody/Guardian Design</span>
Experts say the US economy is the ‘envy of the world’, but Americans are not feeling it.Illustration: Marcus Peabody/Guardian Design

Experts seem to agree the US economy has been on the upswing in 2024. A wave of new jobs, robust consumer spending, lower interest rates, falling inflation, impressive levels of business investment and record Wall Street highs have made the US economy “the envy of the world”.

But many Americans appear to feel very little of that.

Jim White, 62, an aquaculture specialist from North Carolina, said he has “given up [on] going out”.

“I’ll never own a home. A new car is unthinkable,” he said. “The economy is slowly making the rich richer. Everyone else is sinking.”

White is among dozens of people from all over the US who shared with the Guardian how they feel about the economy.

While some expressed general optimism about stabilizing levels of inflation and reported doing well economically, scores said inflation continued to be financially crippling, with their incomes not even remotely keeping up with soaring costs for housing, food, childcare, insurance, healthcare, fuel, subscriptions and entertainment.

Related: If the US is heading for a soft landing, why do people feel so hard up?

Few seemed impressed by months of positive headlines about slowing inflation: “It’s not as if prices have come down, they’ve just stopped rising as obscenely as before,” as one woman in her 70s from Arizona, who still works part-time, put it. “Am I supposed to be happy about that?”

“It’s more manageable, but prices are still too high for our wages compared to pre-pandemic,” said a 36-year-old woman from Salt Lake City who works as a research associate.

Even those who felt the economy was doing very well complained of the exorbitantly high cost of living.

The economy, 40-year-old Roxanne Oesch from Missouri said, felt “remarkably strong”.

“Good jobs are available, interest rates are down and will come down further, and inflation has flattened out. It seems like there is a lot of good news.”

But simultaneously, she added, “most people still cannot enjoy the same level of financial security they had pre-pandemic”.

Alongside various young people who expressed dismay about their economic outlook were dozens of pensioners and people surviving on social security, for whom the new lower interest rates are bad news. “Interest on savings is dropping, [which is] challenging for retirees on fixed incomes,” said retired 71-year-old Paul Ames from Bellport, New York.

“The US is doing a lot better than other developed economies. Gas is still way cheaper than Europe,” said Toni, a retired woman from north Florida, who was among various respondents who felt very positive about the economy because they held stock market investments that had been making healthy gains in recent months.