American households are feeling the worst about the economy since records began, as years of price increases continue to strain family budgets despite cooling inflation rates, according to new data revealing the persistent financial pressure on working families.
The University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers hit all-time lows in May in a preliminary reading released last week, one of several consumer opinion surveys showing Americans have not regained confidence in the U.S. economy since the Covid pandemic struck more than six years ago. The findings underscore how economic instability has become a defining feature of daily life for millions of Americans navigating successive crises from the pandemic to war to trade disruptions.
Cumulative Burden on Households
While economists and monetary policymakers typically track inflation over a 12-month time frame, and by that measure price growth is closer to the Federal Reserve's target of 2% than to the four-decade highs seen during the pandemic, shoppers have focused on the cumulative change in prices over the past several years. Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack told CNBC that from that vantage point, there's been about a decade's worth of inflation in half the time.
Kyla Scanlon, an economic commentator known for coining the term "vibecession," said, "People are starting to hear that inflation is going down, but their box of cereal is still really expensive," and added, "That feels really, really bad." High prices have caused most of the decline in consumer sentiment between 2019 and 2026, according to a data analysis from PNC Financial Services.
Sequential Shocks Without Relief
Economists told CNBC that consumers remain scarred by years of rapid price increases even as the annual inflation rate cools. Americans are also worn out by a series of economic disruptions, including Covid, wars and President Donald Trump's tariffs. Yelena Shulyatyeva, senior economist at the Conference Board, said, "It's a series of shocks," and added, "Consumers don't get a break."
Eric Winograd, an alumnus of the New York Federal Reserve Bank who is now the chief economist at asset manager AllianceBernstein, said, "I can't think of a period where you've had shocks like these," and added, "I'm not saying that these are the biggest in magnitude, but to have this many sequential events is extremely unusual." Georgetown University finance professor Francesco D'Acunto said U.S. consumers would need to see "positive" and "stable" economic conditions for several quarters for sentiment to recover, but instead they have been getting "the opposite" as geopolitical conflicts break out and as Trump continues his push for higher tariffs on trade partners.
The bank's analysis said sticker shock also explains why a model of economic conditions stopped moving in line with consumer sentiment over recent years. Consumers are thinking more about the role of inflation in their lives, and the share of respondents to Michigan's survey who said they heard negative news about price growth or blamed that for their sour outlooks spiked after the pandemic began in 2020. Google searches for the term "inflation" hit all-time highs earlier this year. Brian LeBlanc, PNC's senior economist, said, "No one cared about inflation until it became a problem," and added, "Now, it's something that everybody in the country is thinking about."
Gas Prices and Lifestyle Changes
In the near term, sentiment is unlikely to improve as oil prices stay above $100 a barrel in the wake of the Iran war, several economists told CNBC. The national average price for a gallon of gasoline soared past $4, the level at which a 2022 AAA survey found that a majority of Americans implement lifestyle changes. Gasbuddy said its daily active user base nearly doubled in March as the war ramped up.
Whirlpool said last week that it experienced a "recession-level" decline in appliance demand due to cratering consumer confidence owing to the Middle East conflict. McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski warned analysts that customer spending could take a hit as rising gas prices pressure pocketbooks.
Spending Despite Pessimism
Despite what they tell pollsters, consumers have continued to spend. Uber and Walt Disney last week reported strong customer spending, defying fears that shoppers would tighten their purse strings in response to price increases. Gregory Daco, chief economist at consulting firm EY-Parthenon, said, "The traditional correlation between sentiment and spending has largely broken down," and added, "We have to depart a little bit from the traditional analysis of these gauges because of the unique circumstances that we're currently living through."
Joanne Hsu, the director of Michigan's survey, said, "Consumer sentiment isn't the only thing that really breaks around the pandemic." The S&P 500 reached an all-time high on the same day last week that Michigan released its record-low consumer sentiment reading. The benchmark stock index has more than doubled, surging roughly 130%, since the start of 2020, while Michigan's sentiment gauge has been cut in half, tumbling 52%.
What happens next in the job market can also dictate consumers' feelings and behavior, Winograd said. Federal government data released last week showed the U.S. job market expanded more than economists expected in April, while still pointing to a "low-hire, low-fire" environment. Even with these uncertainties and their gloomy views, American consumers, responsible for roughly two-thirds of all economic activity, are unlikely to crack, Winograd said. "It's a foolish man who bets against the U.S. consumer," he said. "The base case has to be that the consumer continues to plug along."
Why This Matters:
Record-low consumer confidence reflects the lived reality of working families who have absorbed cumulative price increases equivalent to a decade's worth of inflation compressed into half the time, fundamentally altering household budgets and forcing lifestyle changes when gas prices cross critical thresholds. The disconnect between soaring stock markets and collapsing consumer sentiment reveals a bifurcated economic recovery where asset holders prosper while wage earners struggle with persistent cost-of-living pressures. Sequential economic shocks without periods of stability prevent households from rebuilding financial security, raising questions about the adequacy of policy responses to protect families from inflation, trade disruptions, and geopolitical instability. With consumers responsible for two-thirds of economic activity, their sustained pessimism despite continued spending suggests resilience born of necessity rather than confidence, underscoring the need for policies that address structural affordability challenges rather than relying on aggregate economic indicators that mask uneven burdens across income levels.