KEY POINTS
  • Increased living costs for the lowest earners were more than triple their annual wage growth in 2021 — $1,837 versus $578, respectively, according to a report published by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.
  • Middle and high earners largely broke even or came out ahead.
  • Savings for the lowest-income Americans are still elevated but dwindling as they spend down federal benefits like stimulus checks and child tax credit payments, according to the JPMorgan Chase Institute.

The lowest-income Americans are facing a financial conundrum: Inflation is eating into a substantial part of their household budgets, while savings built up during the Covid pandemic are starting to dwindle.

Meanwhile, federal supports like monthly payments of the child tax credit and a pause on student loan payments have ended or will soon lapse. And officials have already warned of delayed tax refunds, which low earners generally rely on more than higher-earning families.