The situation: Low-income consumers face mounting financial strain and are cutting spending as their after-tax wage growth slows, according to a recent Bank of America Institute report.
This pullback is showing up in earnings calls. For example, McDonald’s noted that low-income consumers are thinking twice before pulling into a drive-thru—a broader industry trend as US QSR traffic among this group was down by nearly double-digit percentages YoY.
Looking ahead: The pressure is unlikely to ease soon.
Zooming in on the policy: While many analyses suggest the bill could lower taxes for many Americans, it could actually reduce after-tax income for lower-income households, intensifying financial pressures on those already most vulnerable.
A Penn Wharton Budget Model analysis examined both the proposed tax cuts and the spending reductions needed to fund them—including deep cuts to programs like Medicaid and SNAP. The results were stark:
The findings point to a growing concern: The long-term effects of the bill may widen the economic divide rather than narrow it.
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