Updated
Updated · CBS New York · May 21
U.S. Consumer Spending Holds Up as $188 Fuel Hit Squeezes Lower-Income Households
Updated
Updated · CBS New York · May 21

U.S. Consumer Spending Holds Up as $188 Fuel Hit Squeezes Lower-Income Households

3 articles · Updated · CBS New York · May 21
  • Retail spending has stayed resilient despite sour consumer sentiment, with Walmart and other major chains reporting solid sales and April retail sales still healthy.
  • Higher-income households are driving much of that demand, while temporary support from tax refunds—up 12% to an average $3,276—has helped keep wallets open.
  • Lower- and middle-income consumers are already pulling back on discretionary purchases as gas prices add about $188 in costs per household since late February and inflation remains elevated.
  • Financial strain is showing up in credit use and bills: 22% of people ages 25 to 34 used buy-now-pay-later loans in the first quarter, and about 111 million Americans carry credit card debt.
  • Economists warn the split could widen if fuel prices stay high and wages keep lagging inflation, threatening the consumer spending that drives roughly two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.
As millions use debt for groceries, can wealthy shoppers alone keep the US economy from collapsing?
The US economy seems strong, but is a 'K-shaped' recovery pushing millions toward a hidden financial crisis?