12 charts show how everyone in America but the rich is getting squeezed right now

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12 charts show how everyone in America but the rich is getting squeezed right now
  • US inflation is at a four-decade high, and Americans across income brackets are feeling the squeeze.
  • In May, Gallup highlighted Americans' concerns about finances — from paying rent to covering medical costs.

Americans are stressed out about inflation, which is at a four-decade high. They're seeing inflation's impact as they travel and spend money on goods and services like groceries, flights, and gas.

"Everybody is buying food, everybody is buying gas, everybody's paying utility bills, so it's affecting everybody," Jeffrey Jones, senior editor at Gallup, told Insider. "Obviously, upper-income people can absorb those price increases easier than lower-income people can."

As Insider recently reported, Americans are not feeling so great about the US economy in general, with the University of Michigan's consumer sentiment index plummeting to a new monthly low in June. Gallup's Economic Confidence Index dropped to -45 in May, which Jones wrote is "the lowest reading in Gallup's trend during the coronavirus pandemic, and likely the lowest confidence has been since the tail end of the Great Recession in early 2009."

Jones pointed out to Insider one Gallup poll asking Americans how they rated their finances. For middle income, 55% said their finances were excellent or good in 2021, higher than the 41% of middle-income respondents who said this in 2022. Upper income saw the second-largest percentage-point drop but still had the highest share saying their finances are excellent or good like in 2021. Just under a quarter of lower-income respondents said their finances are excellent or good in the 2022 poll.

But rising prices are not affecting every American equally.

With half of US adults residing in middle-income households and lower-income households feeling inflation pressures more than top earners, we took a look at survey results and data over time to see how Americans' financial situations have been doing and how they are feeling about their circumstances.

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Those in households making $100,000 or more were more likely to say in a Gallup survey that rising prices are not causing them financial hardship.

A higher share of respondents say they're worried about being able to pay bills in 2022 than in 2021.

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Three-fourths of lower-income respondents are worried about having enough for retirement, but the middle class is also concerned about their retirement savings.

Data from the New York Fed highlights the differences in inflation expectations by income.

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People with total household income under $50,000 are most worried about not being able to pay off debt in the near-term.

University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers also highlight how middle-income Americans are feeling about their finances.

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Over a third of middle-income respondents say the reason they're feeling financially better off is because of higher income.

Rising prices seem to be the a growing reason why middle-income respondents are feeling financially worse off.

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Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta data shows how hourly wages have changed during the pandemic for those in different wage quartiles

Overall household wealth has continued to grow for the middle class.

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How much US households have in assets and of what kind varies across wealth percentiles.

Home mortgages make up the highest share of the middle class' liabilities.

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