Despite a series ofeconomic reforms by US President Joe Biden’s administration and Congress,Americans are experiencing the strain of inflation,stagnant wages,and higher interest rates. Middle-class economic discontent is seen as a lingering vulnerability for Biden’s re-election chances.
Biden,channelling populist outrage for inequality,has called for higher tax rates on businesses and rich Americans. Donald Trump,who claimed to represent forgotten Americans in the 2016 campaign,has pledged tax cuts for the middle class if he is elected in November.
In the large poll of 2500 adults,65 per cent of people earning more than 200 per cent of the federal poverty level – at least $US60,000 ($90,000) for a family of four,often considered middle class – said they were struggling financially.
A sizeable share of higher-income Americans also feel financially insecure. The survey shows that a quarter of people making more than five times the federal poverty level – an annual income of more than $US150,000 for a family of four – worry about paying their bills.
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Overall,regardless of the income level,almost six in 10 respondents feel that they are currently financially struggling.
“The economy is booming,and yet many Americans are still gasping for air financially,” said Jennifer Jones Austin,chief executive officer of the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies,an anti-poverty advocacy organisation that is part of the team that commissioned the poll,and co-chair of the National True Cost of Living Coalition. “They simply don’t have the breathing room to plan beyond their present needs.”