Updated
Updated · The Globe and Mail · Jun 1
Franklin Templeton's Desai Rejects Top 10% Spending Thesis, Sees More Resilient U.S. Economy
Updated
Updated · The Globe and Mail · Jun 1

Franklin Templeton's Desai Rejects Top 10% Spending Thesis, Sees More Resilient U.S. Economy

1 articles · Updated · The Globe and Mail · Jun 1

Summary

  • Sonal Desai argued the U.S. recovery is not truly K-shaped, saying fears that affluent households alone are propping up growth overstate both spending divergence and the economy’s fragility.
  • BLS data put the top 10% of households at 23% of consumer spending in 2024—roughly stable since 2004—far below Moody’s estimate that they account for nearly half.
  • Bank of America card data and New York Fed indicators do show some divergence since 2023 to mid-2025, but Desai said the pattern looks more like parallel upward trends than a sharp split.
  • Dallas Fed work using a similar methodology found only a few percentage points of divergence since the 1990s, implying the economy is only slightly more exposed to weaker financial-asset returns.
  • Desai said rising incomes across the distribution—not just at the top—make the U.S. economy more durable, citing data showing poor and lower-middle-class households fell to 34.5% in 2024 from 53.8% in 1979.

Insights

With experts and data clashing, is the US economy's resilience a reality or an illusion built on the spending of the wealthy?
Why is consumer sentiment at a historic low if data shows incomes are rising broadly and the economy appears strong?
As record debt and low savings plague households, is America heading for a 'credit cliff' that aggregate economic data is masking?