Skip to content
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
  • JD Vance Recommends Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to DOJ for Criminal Investigation
  • Airports, AI and Affordability: Week in Review
  • Trump Promises ‘Rally to End All Rallies’ After Performers Dropped Out of Freedom 250
  • What to Know: Trump Strips Job Protections From Thousands of Federal Employees

Office Moving America

  • Top News
  • Best Countries
  • National News
  • U.S. News Decision Points
  • Cartoons
  • Interesting
  • JD Vance Recommends Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to DOJ for Criminal Investigation
  • Airports, AI and Affordability: Week in Review
  • Trump Promises ‘Rally to End All Rallies’ After Performers Dropped Out of Freedom 250
  • What to Know: Trump Strips Job Protections From Thousands of Federal Employees

Office Moving America

  • Top News
  • Best Countries
  • National News
  • U.S. News Decision Points
  • Cartoons
  • Interesting
Headlines
  • JD Vance Recommends Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to DOJ for Criminal Investigation

    5 hours ago
  • Airports, AI and Affordability: Week in Review

    1 day ago
  • Trump Promises ‘Rally to End All Rallies’ After Performers Dropped Out of Freedom 250

    5 days ago
  • What to Know: Trump Strips Job Protections From Thousands of Federal Employees

    5 days ago
  • Nearly Half of U.S. Households Can’t Make Ends Meet

    6 days ago
  • Wall Street Banks and CEOs Promote SpaceX in Flashy Events With BofA, Morgan Stanley, JPM Events Planned

    6 days ago
  • USDA Expects to Contain Screwworm Case in Texas, Rollins Says

    6 days ago
  • US Will Uphold Tariff Caps in Deals With EU, Japan and Others, U.S. Trade Chief Says

    6 days ago
  • US Supreme Court Backs FCC in Clash With Wireless Carriers Over Fines

    6 days ago
  • Who Won and Who Lost in Tuesday’s Primary Elections

    6 days ago
  • Home
  • Nearly Half of U.S. Households Can’t Make Ends Meet
  • U.S. News Decision Points

Nearly Half of U.S. Households Can’t Make Ends Meet

admin6 days ago04 mins
A customer verifies a receipt at a store in New York, the United States, May 8, 2026. The U.S. Consumer Sentiment Index fell to 48.2 in May 2026, according to a preliminary reading released Friday by the University of Michigan UM Surveys of Consumers, down from the final reading of 49.8 in April 2026. (Photo by Zhang Fengguo/Xinhua via Getty Images)

Could your household cope with a $1,000 increase in the annual cost of living?

That’s less than $100 per month.

But the Brookings Institution estimates in a new report that such an increase would mean 3 million more American households could no longer make ends meet, leading some “to forgo rent, utility or debt payments, which can compound into larger financial or health challenges.”

Read more Wall Street Banks and CEOs Promote SpaceX in Flashy Events With BofA, Morgan Stanley, JPM Events Planned

Brookings’ “States of Affordability” report offers a detailed – and sobering – look at the cost of living across all 50 states and across racial demographics at a time when voters say that’s their top concern.

The report takes a long view. Yes, the midterm elections are scarcely 150 days away, but Brookings scanned the affordability landscape back to 2014, giving readers a fuller sense of Americans’ financial health.

The Big Takeaway

Many of them are struggling.

In 2024, 45.5% of all U.S. households did not earn enough to make ends meet, which Brookings defined as enough to cover the cost of necessities. Those include housing, food, child care, transportation and things like utilities.

The problem affects every region – blue states and red states alike.

But it varies widely. In Colorado, the Dakotas, New Hampshire and Washington, D.C., more than 60% of households report making ends meet. (My home state of Vermont comes in at a respectable 56.9%.) But in places like California, Kentucky, Louisiana, New York and Oregon, fewer than 50% say the same. In Hawaii, it’s just 39%, the lowest on the map.

The Long View

While we seem to be talking a lot more about affordability these days – maybe starting with the inflation spike of 2022 – the report makes clear the problem stretches over at least the entire decade.

In nearly every year since 2014, more than 40% of households struggled to make ends meet.

The only exceptions? The post-pandemic recovery of 2021 and 2022, when the federal government unlocked a range of benefits for millions of Americans.

As those benefits expired and costs rose, the proportion of Americans reporting they were making ends meet dove sharply.

“While the share of households making ends meet increased by 2 percentage points over the decade, that share dropped by a full 10 percentage points in just two years following the COVID-19 pandemic, from 2022 to 2024, erasing most of the gains made earlier in the decade,” the report says.

Read more USDA Expects to Contain Screwworm Case in Texas, Rollins Says

(In a previous professional incarnation, I argued in 2023 that the expiration of so many benefits was the biggest political story of the moment.)

“When costs exceed incomes, families are forced to make painful tradeoffs. They postpone critical medical care, forgo healthy food or skip meals, and go further into debt,” Brookings says. “What remains less clear – for families on both sides of the poverty line – is a path to solving the affordability crisis given all its dimensions, from stagnating incomes and declining upward mobility to rising costs for everyday necessities.”

READ:

Americans Are Tapping Out Their Savings

Racial Divides

In 2024, 55% of U.S. households of color reported not being able to make ends meet, the report says. And “over the 2014-to-2024 period, the shares of Black and Latino or Hispanic households making ends meet were the lowest of any demographic group.”

However, in some states, households of color posted larger gains than the state did overall.

In Georgia, for instance, the proportion of households of color reporting they were making ends meet rose seven percentage points from 2014 to 2024 (to 45%). For the state overall, the rise was three points (to 52%).

The Fix?

Affordability is the relationship between income and costs. Raise incomes, lower costs, and it gets easier to make ends meet.

“More affordable lives are within reach,” Brookings asserts. “As of 2024, 37.9 million U.S. households could afford to make ends meet with a raise of $10 an hour. Additionally, if costs declined by $500 per month, another 10 million households could make ends meet.”

A $10/hour raise? It’s not clear that’s politically “within reach” in a country where the federal minimum wage has been at $7.25/hour since 2009.

Read more US Will Uphold Tariff Caps in Deals With EU, Japan and Others, U.S. Trade Chief Says

Tagged: economy inflation money personal finance Sign in to manage your newsletters »

Post navigation

Previous: Wall Street Banks and CEOs Promote SpaceX in Flashy Events With BofA, Morgan Stanley, JPM Events Planned
Next: What to Know: Trump Strips Job Protections From Thousands of Federal Employees

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MARCH 27: Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents patrol Terminal 1 at John F. Kennedy International Airport on March 27, 2026 in New York, New York. The Senate unanimously approved funding for the Department of Homeland Security, excluding money for immigration enforcement and deportation operations. The agreement came hours after U.S. President Donald Trump said he would sign an order to immediately pay Transportation Security Administration officers. Travel disruptions continue as hundreds of TSA agents quit or worked without pay during the partial government shutdown. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Airports, AI and Affordability: Week in Review

admin1 day ago 0
Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, right, speaks alongside federal and state law enforcement officials during a press conference on Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026, in Miami. (Carl Juste/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Florida Is Suing OpenAI. Will Other States Follow Suit?

admin1 week ago 0
U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP sign, inscription and symbol in yellow background in Newark Liberty International Airport EWR serving the New York Metropolitan area with arriving passenger walking in the terminal towards the immigration passport control. United States Customs and Border Protection is the largest federal law enforcement agency of the United States Department of Homeland Security with agents and officers, it's the primary border control organization. Newark, United States of America on November 2024 (Photo by Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

DHS Threatens International Travel to U.S. as World Cup Looms

admin1 week ago 0
BOSTON, MA - NOVEMBER 14: Uber and Lyft stickers are pictured inside a ride share vehicle outside the Massachusetts State House in Boston on Nov. 14, 2019. Many drivers pick up fares for both companies. That boxy delivery truck blocking your lane is just one maddening manifestation of a public failure to adapt to the new convenience economy. The technology built around our desire for instant gratification - Uber and Lyft, DoorDash and Grubhub, the Amazon packages whizzing from distribution centers to our doorsteps - has become the source of huge amounts of new traffic. Hundreds of thousands of these trips would never have happened just a few years ago. But the public policy response has been no match for this challenge, the Globe Spotlight Team has found. In Boston, in fact, the operative policy only enables the offender. It is part of a pattern of delayed or passive public response to our slow-moving crisis in commuting. True, state officials were a nose ahead of the pack in imposing a surcharge on Uber and Lyft rides three years ago - an attempt at the time to make the companies pay their share of transportation costs - but now they have fallen out of the vanguard. Confronted by the powerful ride-share lobby on Beacon Hill, state leaders havent summoned the will or nerve to impose the kind of high fees and stringent limits other cities are using to try to curb the traffic. (Photo by Lane Turner/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Wars of Words and Worker Power: Week in Review

admin1 week ago 0

Recent Posts

  • JD Vance Recommends Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to DOJ for Criminal Investigation
  • Airports, AI and Affordability: Week in Review
  • Trump Promises ‘Rally to End All Rallies’ After Performers Dropped Out of Freedom 250
  • What to Know: Trump Strips Job Protections From Thousands of Federal Employees
  • Nearly Half of U.S. Households Can’t Make Ends Meet

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026

Categories

  • Best Countries
  • National News
  • Top News
  • U.S. News Decision Points
  • Top News
  • Best Countries
  • National News
  • U.S. News Decision Points
  • Cartoons
  • Interesting
Newsmatic - News WordPress Theme 2026. Powered By BlazeThemes.