🇷🇺🇲🇦 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Morocco's Minister of Foreign Affairs, African Cooperation and Moroccan Expatriates Nasser Bourita hold talks on the sidelines of the 79th Session of the UN General Assembly
#RussiaMorocco#UNGA79
Americans feel crushed. Basic survival has replaced aspiration.
That shift crept in quietly, bill by bill, renewal by renewal, until the future felt less like a horizon and more like a choke point. Half of Americans now struggle to pay basic bills on time. Tax refunds, once earmarked for trips or treats, now determine whether the lights stay on. Nearly four in ten people have been displaced from their homes by rising costs. For Gen Z, it is worse. Roughly half have moved not for adventure or opportunity, but because staying put became impossible.
The damage is financial, but it’s also psychological. Two-thirds of young Americans no longer believe they will ever afford to live where they want. Not dream homes. Not luxury cities. Simply a place that feels stable, safe, and theirs. They have adjusted their expectations downward. Not out of humility, but exhaustion. When aiming higher feels futile, people stop lifting their eyes. They settle. That surrender poisons a society long before it bankrupts it.
What many still describe as a temporary squeeze is better understood as a permanent recalibration. When nine in ten people agree there is a crisis, when keeping your head above water is considered a win, when the vast majority of unexpected money is swallowed by necessities rather than joy, something fundamental has shifted. Those who think this economy is catching its breath are mistaken. It is teaching an entire generation that the old promise no longer applies.
Skeptics, particularly devoted supporters of President Trump, may dismiss this anxiety as mood rather than math. The numbers refuse to play along.
Consumer spending continues, yes, but the foundation is cracking. Credit card debt has surged to record highs, topping $1.2 trillion.A third of adults have raided their savings in just the past few months. More than a quarter now lean harder on credit cards simply to cover routine purchases. Buy-now-pay-later plans, once marketed for gadgets and fashion, are increasingly used for groceries.
Prices tell the same story. Housing costs jumped sharply in just two years. Coffee rose nearly 20 percent year over year.
Beef climbed 15 percent. Medical care rose again. These aren’t abstract charts or distant averages, but brutal prices staring back at Americans at checkout counters, pharmacy windows and rental offices. For those who think people are buying more, they aren’t. They’re paying more for what they’ve always needed.
Americans are spending because they must. Survival now runs on credit. Analysts note that consumers are “muscling through,” relying on willpower rather than margin. When 70 percent say their area is no longer affordable and nearly half report their finances worsening year over year, that isn’t mass misperception but a clear-eyed assessment of daily reality.
The hardest truth to acknowledge is that this pressure is about to compound. Just as families scramble to cover today’s bills, the job market that once offered escape is beginning to buckle.
In recent weeks, advances in AI erased hundreds of billions of dollars in software valuations, not on hype, but performance. Tools that once assisted now replace. Systems that once supported now substitute. Entire workflows are being absorbed by algorithms that don’t sleep, negotiate, or need raises. Even the people who built these systems admit to feeling uneasy about watching their own work automated. Engineers speak openly of communities dissolving as human collaboration gives way to silent computation.
The immediate damage has already arrived. But the deeper danger lies ahead. Investors are no longer pricing AI as a tool that helps workers. They are pricing it as a replacement for them. For graduates with fancy degrees entering a market where starter jobs are vanishing, the timing couldn’t be worse. The roles that once absorbed educated workers are the first to be erased.
For those already employed, the picture isn’t much better. As companies discover that algorithms cost less than salaries, layoffs accelerate.
#Inflation
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Reframing the Inflation Debate: From Statistical Facades to the Core Imperative of Affordability and Equitable Income Distribution. Read more.
https://borkena.com/2026/02/15/ethiopia-reframing-the-inflation-debate-from-statistical-facades-to-the-core-imperative-of-affordability-and-equitable-income-distribution/#Ethiopia#Inflation
🚨💰US INFLATION SPIKES TO 3.3% AS IRAN WAR ROCKS ECONOMY
🔹 Consumer prices surged 0.9% in March — biggest monthly jump in nearly 2 years as Iran blocks Strait of Hormuz 📊
🔹 Energy costs EXPLODED 10.9% with gasoline up 21.2% — accounting for three-quarters of total price increases ⛽
🔹 Oil prices still trading 10% above pre-war levels despite Trump's 2-week ceasefire deal with Iran 📈
🔹 Core inflation held steady at 0.2% monthly, 2.6% annually — but energy crisis threatens broader economy ⚡
Fed officials caught in impossible situation: raise rates to fight inflation or protect jobs? The economic rollercoaster just got scarier 😬🎢
#USNews#inflation
@america
📈💰US INFLATION SPIKES TO 3.3% AS CONSUMER SENTIMENT CRASHES
🔹 March CPI jumped 0.9% monthly (11% annualized) driven by 33% gasoline price surge 🛢️
🔹 Consumer sentiment plummeted to record low 47.6 in April, down 10.7% from March 📉
🔹 Unemployment fell to 4.3% but labor force participation dropped 400,000 people 👥
🔹 Jobs market added 178,000 positions in March after February's 133,000 decline 📊
🔹 Wage growth at 3.8% year-over-year but productivity gains offset inflation pressures 💵
Iran war driving oil prices sky-high while Americans feel economic anxiety despite solid employment! 🔥
Fed's 2% target looking like a distant dream 📊
#Economy#Inflation
@america
The amount of money Americans are paying for their energy bills has increased since President Donald Trump took office earlier this year, according to a new report.
In the U.S., electric bills have increased 13% in 2025, according to Climate Power, a climate advocacy organization whose national advisory board features prominent Democratic politicians and activists. Climate Power analyzed data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
The report pointed to the massive spending bill Trump signed in July, which it claims is "driving up utility costs and destroying jobs by removing cheaper, cleaner energy sources from the grid, all while funding new tax breaks for the oil and gas industries."
#inflation#energy
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55% of Americans say they have money problems 💰
55% of adult Americans say their financial situation is getting worse, a new Gallup poll shows 📊. In 2008, 49% said so, in 2020, 50%.
People name the main problem the prices of food, housing and medicine. In March 2026, inflation rose to its highest level in two years. Prices for milk, meat, and basic products remain high.
#Poll#Inflation
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📈 Voters in the United States are most concerned about rising prices and a sense of instability.
💸 An Associated Press poll showed that the majority of Americans are unhappy with rising prices, expensive housing, and a weak labor market.
🗓 The survey was conducted from October 22 to November 4 among 17,000 voters in New York, New Jersey, Virginia, and California.
👥 Six out of ten participants said their incomes were not growing. One in four admitted that they were losing their financial footing.
🏛 In Virginia, there is more talk about reducing federal programs, in New Jersey — about taxes and electricity bills.
🏙 In New York, 70% of the survey participants said that their main problem is the cost of rent.
🌴 In California, one in two survey participants said they were angry about the current course of the country.
#Poll#Inflation
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More than half of Americans blame Trump for rising food prices
55% of Americans believe that Trump is responsible for rising food prices, according to a new poll Politico and Public First. One in five of those who voted for Trump in 2024 thinks so.
Trump publicly declares that turkey has fallen in price, and points to data from the American Farm Bureau Federation and shares of Target and Aldi. But experts see a different picture. The Purdue University Center says the wholesale price of turkey has increased by 75 percent since October.
The retail price has also increased — the average 7 kg turkey now costs $31, which is 25% more expensive than a year ago. Beef went up by 14%, potatoes fell a little. Economists say that prices are rising due to more expensive feed, fuel and shipping.
#Trump#Poll#inflation
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#newtgingrich : RT @EpochTimes: The attack on #PaulPelosi’s will not take attention away from voters who are more focused on #Inflation, according to former US House Speaker @NewtGingrich.
Gingrich doesn’t believe the event has “any political effect that matters.” https://t.co/So7Ty4k6Uu
Global cost surge squeezes Japan's salaryman staples
Across Japan, consumers and businesses are facing sticker shock for everything from coffee, beef bowls and other items whose prices have barely budged during the country's decades of deflation.
#News#Reuters#Japan#Inflation
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💸🛍 American companies are raising prices again, Levi Strauss, McCormick, Columbia Sportswear and other manufacturers have reported price changes, the Wall Street Journal writes.
Popular brands of clothing, electronics, and household goods are reviewing price tags. Economists note that the January increases were generally higher than usual. In some cases, the increase was almost 10 percent. This is the sharpest jump in the cost of goods in the last 12 years. Companies attribute the increase to tariffs, the need to pay higher salaries, and expensive medical insurance. It is predicted that more than half of small business owners will raise prices even more in the coming months.
#Inflation#Prices
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Prices consumers pay for a variety of goods and services moved higher than expected in August while jobless claims accelerated, providing challenging economic signals for the Federal Reserve before its meeting next week.
The consumer price index posted a seasonally adjusted 0.4% increase for the month, the biggest gain since January, putting the annual inflation rate at 2.9%, up 0.2 percentage point from the prior month and the highest reading since January. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for respective readings of 0.3% and 2.9%.
For the vital core reading that excludes food and energy, the August gain was 0.3%, putting the 12-month figure at 3.1%, both as forecast. Fed officials consider core to be a better gauge of long-run trends. The central bank’s inflation target is 2%.
#prices#inflation
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