Almost 40 percent of Americans would struggle to cover a $400 emergency [www.stltoday.com]
The Fed is blaming low inflation on 'very, very low' apparel prices [finance.yahoo.com]
Shocking number of Americans can't cover $400 surprise expense [www.foxbusiness.com]
Nearly 40% of Americans can't cover a surprise $400 expense [www.cbsnews.com]
Almost 40 percent of Americans would struggle to cover a $400 emergency https://t.co/pJoPnIx5zT pic.twitter.com/HVAlZAeH3w
— St. Louis Post-Dispatch (@stltoday) May 24, 2019
Nice look at sneaker and sweater disinflation and what it means for the Fed, via @bcheungz @ReggieWade https://t.co/ECZY704PfV
— Jeanna Smialek (@jeannasmialek) May 25, 2019
The Fed x the Air Jordan BRED 11's?
— Brian Cheung (@bcheungz) May 24, 2019
Jay Powell has blamed low inflation for "transient" drags on clothing prices, but industry analysts say price declines are a long-term story for apparel + footwear
The ? collab w/ streetwear reporter @ReggieWade:https://t.co/zSSDfu2kwo
Speeding ticket + late fees can cost ~$400. Failure to pay leads to suspended license. Driving to work to earn $ to pay ticket w/ susp license is a crime. This is senseless criminalization of poverty. Thats why @sao13th is fighting these poverty traps. https://t.co/JextVmWjRt
— Andrew Warren (@AndrewWarrenFL) May 24, 2019
Unemployment is low and the stock market is up, but the people are poor.
— Millennial Politics (@MillenPolitics) May 25, 2019
Macroeconomic indicators never tell the full story. https://t.co/Q9TXvFwgym
An economy where nearly 40% are living paycheck to paycheck isn’t an economy that’s working for the American people. https://t.co/mOtXSmY2mA
— DNC War Room (@DNCWarRoom) May 24, 2019
Donald Trump says he created the greatest economy in history. His millionaire friends may think that, but too many Americans are still struggling to make ends meet. https://t.co/8iPY5x28i8
— The Democrats (@TheDemocrats) May 24, 2019
Roughly 4 in 10 Americans would struggle covering a $400 emergency expense, Federal Reserve data show. https://t.co/5rhtw4079H
— KDKA (@KDKA) May 25, 2019
The latest data-backed reminder that even "good" economies can leave lots of folks way behind. Policy solutions like fairer tax codes, more robust public investments, higher wages & much more are needed if we want to start to fix this problem https://t.co/DMdL2hLR2a
— Jon Whiten (@WhitenJon) May 25, 2019