Middle Class Destruction: The Real Story Behind America’s Declining Economy

From Peter Reagan for Birch Gold Group

It probably comes as no surprise to you that, these days, the middle class, the backbone of the nation, are struggling. “Gasping for air,” as Newsweek puts it.

Here’s the original press release from the National True Cost of Living Coalition.

The “middle class” is a rather vague concept – one definition is those whose incomes are 3x the federal poverty line (currently $15,000), which encompasses nearly 2 in every 3 Americans. They span the spectrum, from high school graduates to post-graduate degrees, and may work in blue- or white-collar jobs. They live in cities, the suburbs and in rural areas.

In fact, just about the only thing they have in common, other than their incomes, is their difficulty making ends meet:

…the economic hardships of millions of middle-class Americans are going unseen by their government. They feel left behind, unable to relate to testaments of a better economic forecast, and many doubt they will ever find a way out of their financial struggles.

Here are a few highlights from the poll results:

  • 40% of ALL Americans are unable to plan beyond their next paycheck
  • 46% don’t have $500 saved for a rainy day
  • A quarter of those making $75,000 per year spend over 50% of their budget on housing
  • The majority of those making under $60,000 per year find their debt “difficult to manage”

Being a middle-class American these days simply doesn’t offer economic security.

Maybe this is why so many people are fed up with hearing about how the economy is booming?

See, in a prosperous country, the success of the middle and upper classes should parallel each other. If upper class wealth grows 10%, then middle class wealth should grow approximately the same amount – distributed across a much wider portion of the population, it’s a smaller increase per capita, but represents a similar amount of wealth.

Unfortunately, this isn’t happening. And it hasn’t been for quite some time.

In fact, according to a Pew Research study from May:

The middle class has fallen behind on two key counts.

The growth in income for the middle class since 1970 has not kept pace with the growth in income for the upper-income tier.

And the share of total U.S. household income held by the middle class has plunged.

So what’s going on?

Here’s what CNN blames:

America’s middle class is feeling the heat from sky-high interest rates and persistent inflation.

Economic data and corporate earnings reports have shown that lower-income consumers are struggling to pay their bills on time, reducing their spending and searching for deals. Wealthier Americans, who have helped support the economy’s strength through high interest rates, are also starting to reel in their purchases.

U.S. home prices are at record highs. Americans are racking up debt and running low on savings accumulated during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. Thousands of corporate layoffs have some Americans struggling to make ends meet saying they feel as though they are living in a recession.

Okay, so there are two things going on…

First, prices (especially for homes) have risen well beyond the capacity of the majority of Americans to ever become homeowners. Late last year, we saw headlines like “Homes ‘unaffordable’ in 99% of nation for average American.”

But it’s not just homes – it’s also rent, gas, food, energy, car insurance, childcare (you know, the necessities) that cost 15%-40% more today than they did three short years ago. We’ve discussed this quite often and in great detail.

When prices on necessities go up, you have to pay them. Obviously that causes a massive amount of financial stress.

Second, higher interest rates have made debt increasingly expensive. Especially floating-rate debt (like credit cards and unadvisable mortgages).

This presents us with a Catch-22…

Higher interest rates are the Federal Reserve’s antidote for higher prices.

Right now, middle-class Americans are being squeezed between 3.6% core CPI inflation (that’s 80% over the Fed’s target) and a 5.33% Effective Federal Funds Rate. (Which is, as Phillip Patrick pointed out earlier this week, only barely above the long-term average!)

Now, CNN tried to make the case that the “economy is booming.” But I’ve explained the difference between GDP and real economic growth before.

Suffice to say a growing economy and a prosperous one just aren’t the same thing.

And the shrinking supply of good jobs is a perfect example of the difference…

A good job is hard to find (and getting harder)

Any economy worth its salt can produce low-skill, low-wage jobs. The ability for the middle class to find work is what generally separates the wheat from the chaff, at least in first world countries like the United States.

But according to a number of different reports, the middle class job market is sluggish at best:

Recent data published by Vanguard shows demand for higher-income employees is waning, painting a picture of a two-tier job market that has seen hiring flourish for blue-collar workers and languish for white-collar workers.

Among the lowest-income earners – those making less than $55,000 annually – the hiring rate has remained above pre-pandemic levels, at 1.5%. But hiring for those who earn more than $96,000 has slowed to just 0.5%…

It marks the slowest hiring rate for high-income workers since 2014, excluding a major drop during the pandemic.

In other words, the job market is stagnating overall. It’s getting tougher and tougher to find a good job:

The labor market is stagnating, particularly for white-collar workers. Employers are reluctant to let workers go and they also aren’t in a hurry to hire.

“The stagnant job market is driving people crazy,” said Phoebe Gavin, a career coach in media, entertainment, and tech.

Here’s just how challenging the job hunt can be for the middle class in the current employment market:

A graphic designer told Axios he’s been looking for a new role for eight months. There are so many hoops to jump through in the interview process, he says. And the salaries and freelance rates on offer are far lower than a few years ago.

The bottom line: Not too long ago, most professionals were living in a job hoppers paradise – now not so much.

When middle-class workers were able to easily “trade up” an existing job for a new, higher-paying job, they were able to stay on top of persistently rising expenses.

That time, sadly, has passed… Now those who do have jobs are truly grateful, even when their pay falls short of expenses.

And those who don’t have jobs are getting desperate.

Overall, we’re at a very precarious economic time:

  • Inflation has run above (sometimes far, far above) the Fed’s 2% target for 39 consecutive months
  • Average paychecks have risen, but fallen far short of the higher cost of living
  • The Fed’s interest rate hikes have pushed inflation down, and sent debt payments soaring
  • Both middle-class and wealthier Americans are cutting back on spending

When you consider anemic economic growth as well, you get the recipe for the second-worst economic scenario: Stagflation.

Trust me, a recession is good news when the other choice is another “lost decade” of persistent inflation, low-to-negative economic growth and high unemployment.

That means it’s time to make sure your savings are diversified enough to thrive in even the worst circumstances…

Diversify and protect your savings with recession-resistant assets

The threat of stagflation has reared its ugly head a couple of times during the last few years. So far, we’ve somehow muddled through.

But if you aren’t anticipating a recession right now (as in “before the end of the year”), then your head isn’t on straight.

It’s best to make any strategic financial moves now, rather than later.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again:

The best time to buy gold is before the next crisis.

Right now, you have options. Take a moment to learn about the benefits of owning physical precious metals like gold and silver. They offer inflation resistance and growth potential – along with diversification benefits. In short, physical gold and silver may be exactly what you need to put your savings on a firm foundation, regardless of what happens next.

In addition, if you’re one of the middle-class Americans “gasping for air” financially, I’d love to hear more about your situation. Post a comment or reach out to us on Facebook.

With global instability increasing and election uncertainties on the horizon, protecting your retirement savings is more important than ever. And this is why you should consider diversifying into a physical gold IRA. Because they offer an easy and tax-deferred way to safeguard your savings using tangible assets. To learn more, click here to get your FREE info kit on Gold IRAs from Birch Gold Group.

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26 Comments
well_Inever
well_Inever
June 11, 2024 1:59 pm

I’m surprised this article didn’t mention health insurance and medical bills (maybe I missed it). Regardless, when you place the burden of all the bums getting free healthcare on the middle class you’re damn right they’re hurting. I say they’re because I used to be in the middle class.

Also, all the non productive invaders getting thousands of dollars for food and other essentials that’s stealing the value of the currency from the middle class and handing it to bums!

Lionel
Lionel
  well_Inever
June 11, 2024 5:15 pm

Yes. Our healthcare (LOL) is 50% higher per capita than #2 Germany. Americans are too damn stupid to know.

k31
k31
  Lionel
June 11, 2024 10:59 pm

Everything Americans believe are lies. Everything.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  well_Inever
June 12, 2024 7:11 am

We used to have a platinum level healthcare for our family back when the children were very young and my wife and I were in the prime of our life. I think the premiums were somewhere around 2K per month- this was 20 years ago. Who knows what that kind of thing would cost today.

We haven’t had health insurance of any kind since 2009. I have had three accidental injuries that required surgeries to repair, my wife negotiated them down by 75% or more for a total cost for health care- including dentists visits- of less than 10K over the course of 16 years, or five months of premiums back in the day.

I figure we’ve saved our family, conservatively, close to half a million dollars had we kept the same kind of plan, half that if we went bargain basement level.

It’s because we live a far healthier lifestyle, even with the risks associated from the kind of work we do; broken bones, stitches, etc., that we require so little from the modern medical/pharmaceutical/insurance industry that steals the wealth of most working Americans.

Good food in moderation, plenty of exercise in the form of labor and recreation, good sleep, low levels of anxiety and worry, solid family relationships and friendships that promote well-being and calm as well as living in accord with our nature instead of as a useful tool in a consumer society based on our value as human livestock to benefit the corporate/political establishment.

Life is full of risk. Everyone suffers from something from time to time, accidents happens, we get old, we fall ill, we die. That’s the way life has always been and will always be, there is no escaping it, but there are ways that you, rather than they, can protect yourself and your loved ones in accordance with your own best interests and live the best life possible.

The system isn’t designed to benefit you, it’s constructed to deliver the maximum outcome for them. Anyone who reads TBP already knows this.

TOO F'n Hilarious
TOO F'n Hilarious
June 11, 2024 3:27 pm

BY DESIGN

“the economic hardships of millions of middle-class Americans are going unseen by their government”

Z-La
Z-La
June 11, 2024 3:59 pm

the middle class, the backbone of the nation, are struggling.”

It’s actually the lower economic class that is (was) the backbone of America. This can pointed out by many indicators, such as the biblical mandate to leave some extra for the poor (with respect to the labor in obtaining it); the gleaning principle. It comes with a warning or a stern admonishment about the unifying of the poor and the immigrants/migrants (a disgruntled class) otherwise. Further, now that the middle class is famished and impoverished how is it that they are the backbone with primarily both parents out of the home and in the workforce and unable to afford daycare, groceries, transportation costs, necessary bills and expenses? They further are legislated against with regard to higher taxes and lower wages with no recourse unless they’re prepared to go guerilla so to speak. They are not in control of the economic levers of power. Neither are they the social influencers or trendsetters. In reality they were the backbone for the elites, increasing their coffers, while ultimately depleting theirs and moreso that of the lower economic class. If they were the backbone of America they wouldn’t be so ill-equipped and unprepared for restructuring and adapting their living circumstances, but rather would be advancing into the encroachers camp.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 11, 2024 4:43 pm

Yes those struggling to pay their debts, pay 50% of their income for housing, can’t afford groceries, and don’t have $500 dollars put away for a rainy day have a lot of money to invest in gold!
I’ve been there in life and where the next meal was coming from was way more important than investing in gold at that time.

k31
k31
  Anonymous
June 11, 2024 11:01 pm

There are not enough producers in this country for gold to be of much comfort, I perceive, i.e. for some, production capacity may be the better investment.

MN Steel
MN Steel
  k31
June 12, 2024 2:51 pm

Sucks to be hungry and have gold when the guy with food wants an oil lamp and some oil because the grid went down after the workers couldn’t buy food with their paycheck.

This next month is going to be the end of “The Before Times” and definitely not remembered fondly by those that make it through.

Lionel
Lionel
June 11, 2024 5:12 pm

CNN is laughable. Rates are seriously too low and home prices and illegal stock market proves it. The only way to stop rising home prices and massive runaway inflation is to return to Volcker Fed Fund rates of the 70s. That was needed to kill inflation running at 13%, which was lower than our real and unreported inflation. The stock market is also what keeps homes and stock market at highs in anhorrible economy and job market killed by AI. Invest in stocks (ie the Woke America) and you invest in our suicide.

Another Big Lie – Part 2

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Lionel
June 11, 2024 5:45 pm

Nonsense. Controlling inflation means ending it source.
.
comment image

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
June 11, 2024 7:08 pm

The ‘source’ is Congress, specifically the House and also the Senate. Remember all spending starts in the House. The House could quit funding stupidity, but they don’t.
The secondary source is the Treasury that prints the money. I have no problem with doing away with the fed, but the Fed can only react. And as we have seen the fed has no tools to deal with 11 trillion and 4 years of government spending and money printing. If they did inflation wouldn’t be 30- 40%.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
June 11, 2024 7:48 pm

No, it’s not. Inflation is creation of fiat currency, diluting its value.

Framius Ridiculousus
Framius Ridiculousus
  Anonymous
June 12, 2024 12:16 am

” Too many dollars chasing too few goods “so in essence the money supply is not comensurate with or reflective of actual productivity ,as in “GDP” ( gross domestic product).Our officially reported GDP numbers are largely “fake and gay ” ( a lot of Wall Street virtual ones and zeros flying around in cyberpace). Eat that ?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Lionel
June 11, 2024 6:01 pm

Proximo: “I did not pay good money for the stock because of the company. I paid it so that I could profit from America’s death.”

Repealed, among other chicanery. However...
Repealed, among other chicanery. However...
June 11, 2024 5:20 pm

…It has ONLY been going on since…

“Despite the banking reform’s success, these regulations, particularly those associated with the Glass-Steagall Act, grew controversial by the 1970s, as banks complained that they would lose customers to other financial companies unless they could offer a wider variety of financial services. The government responded by giving banks greater freedom to offer consumers new types of financial services. Then, in late 1999, Congress enacted the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, which repealed the Glass-Steagall Act. The new law went beyond the considerable freedom that banks already enjoyed in offering everything from consumer banking to underwriting securities. It allowed banks, securities, and insurance firms to form financial conglomerates that could market a range of financial products including mutual funds, stocks and bonds, insurance, and automobile loans. As with laws deregulating transportation, telecommunications, and other industries, the new law was expected to generate a wave of mergers among financial institutions.”

A Brief History of Banking Reform After the New Deal – ThoughtCo

But FRET NOT! JUSTICE IS BLIND! 🤣🤣🤣

comment image

Had to edit. Actually? Been a goin’ on in THIS Country since the king & his cronies
were ‘displaced’. By an INSIDE JOB.

The Bible? The Rest of the Story!



YourAverageJoe
YourAverageJoe

Justice has a nice ass

k31
k31
  YourAverageJoe
June 11, 2024 11:03 pm

Pagan gods need something going for them.

Framius Ridiculousus
Framius Ridiculousus
  YourAverageJoe
June 12, 2024 12:19 am

And to me it looks like her right tit is out over the top of her dress , which I wouldn’t a noticed had you not remarked about her rear end which sent me back for a second look . .

Anonymouse
Anonymouse
June 11, 2024 6:39 pm

First your money then your food…I’m guessing after these measures reach fruition the cabal will unleash their illegal standing army that they have been building and funding.

Z-La
Z-La
  Anonymouse
June 11, 2024 7:19 pm

Yes, the camps are next and at some point will be manned by non-native persons. It’s bizarre but also not surprising or unexpected that it will get to this point due to the preponderance of a usurping system coddled by the voting class. Without the public managing the various and according institutions during times of relative ease and fostering mobility across the spheres they’ve pushed themselves out of the power centers.

YourAverageJoe
YourAverageJoe
June 11, 2024 8:46 pm

Never ever enroll in a precious metals IRA.
You will pay maintenance and storage fees on gold/silver bars/ coins that you never see in real life, and when it comes to liquidating it, get ready to pay shipping and insurance costs.
Axe me how I knows.
Buy directly from a coin.shop or APMEX or Kitco, etc.
Keep it buried somewhere in your pasture under an inconspicuous landmark.

k31
k31
June 11, 2024 10:57 pm

By deliberate design, this country hasn’t paid its own way in decades. Now we deal with the consequences and they are just beginning. When the boomers are dead, so will this country be. May the most wicked generation receive their reward.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
June 11, 2024 11:46 pm

Long story short – We all overdosed on fukitol.

Nimpcompoop
Nimpcompoop
June 12, 2024 1:07 pm

Take the middle class out and America will fall then the world. It’s why they are targeting the middle class.