Here's a sobering reality check on the current state of the US economy: 92% of employed Americans have had to dial back their spending. That's not a small margin of error—that's the overwhelming majority feeling the squeeze.
What we're seeing is a slow-motion erosion of purchasing power. As inflation pressures compound and wage growth fails to keep pace, ordinary folks are making hard choices: cutting back on discretionary purchases, delaying big-ticket items, trimming restaurant visits. It's the everyday math of survival in an economy where living costs keep climbing.
For anyone tracking macro trends and market cycles, this data is a key signal. Consumer spending drives roughly 70% of the US economy. When that many people are in retrenchment mode, it ripples through everything—retail demand, corporate earnings, employment trends. The standard of living squeeze is real, and it's affecting decision-making at every level.
This isn't just a personal finance story. It's an economic headwind that shapes everything from inflation expectations to asset allocation strategies. Markets don't move in a vacuum, and consumer behavior data like this is part of the bigger picture worth paying attention to.
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CounterIndicator
· 32m ago
92%?Honestly, that number is a bit conservative. People around me have already started eating dirt.
The Federal Reserve is still just talking nonsense about a soft landing. Wake up, everyone.
92% of people are cutting back on expenses, is this really happening...
Is it time to short US stocks? This signal couldn't be more obvious.
Wait, is this data reliable? It feels a bit exaggerated...
So people who are still spending now are all the wealthy, haha.
Purchasing power is evaporating so quickly that even my stablecoins are unstable...
That's why I went all in on crypto, the traditional economy is too fragile.
The Federal Reserve better cut interest rates soon, or big trouble is coming...
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NFTPessimist
· 01-13 22:42
92%? Feels like it's less. Out of ten people around me, nine are tightening their belts, and the remaining one is still pretending nothing's wrong.
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just_another_fish
· 01-13 22:38
92% this number... Oh my god, this is the real warning signal. How good can the market be when consumer demand is a mess?
There's really nothing wrong with being bearish on US stocks.
No wonder lately everything seems to be getting more expensive, but wages just won't go up.
A hard landing for the economy is already on the way.
That's why I've always said that crypto is the true hedging tool. Fiat currency is shrinking, everyone.
Retail is about to collapse, and next up are corporate earnings.
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DogeBachelor
· 01-13 22:33
92%?Really... I feel like I haven't even lived up to that number.
Isn't this just a classic case of the purchasing power spiral downward, with wages lagging behind rising prices? When will this cycle be broken?
A 70% decline in consumption driving the economy... Is this crisis really coming?
View OriginalReply0
OnchainHolmes
· 01-13 22:30
92% of people are cutting back on expenses, and this data is really starting to be hard to believe; money is becoming less and less valuable.
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FUD_Vaccinated
· 01-13 22:22
92% of people are cutting back on expenses, this data is a bit crazy... If consumer spending collapses, the entire economy will have to follow suit.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHunter007
· 01-13 22:16
92% of people are tightening their belts, and this number says it all. Is the US economy really about to collapse?
Here's a sobering reality check on the current state of the US economy: 92% of employed Americans have had to dial back their spending. That's not a small margin of error—that's the overwhelming majority feeling the squeeze.
What we're seeing is a slow-motion erosion of purchasing power. As inflation pressures compound and wage growth fails to keep pace, ordinary folks are making hard choices: cutting back on discretionary purchases, delaying big-ticket items, trimming restaurant visits. It's the everyday math of survival in an economy where living costs keep climbing.
For anyone tracking macro trends and market cycles, this data is a key signal. Consumer spending drives roughly 70% of the US economy. When that many people are in retrenchment mode, it ripples through everything—retail demand, corporate earnings, employment trends. The standard of living squeeze is real, and it's affecting decision-making at every level.
This isn't just a personal finance story. It's an economic headwind that shapes everything from inflation expectations to asset allocation strategies. Markets don't move in a vacuum, and consumer behavior data like this is part of the bigger picture worth paying attention to.