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All income brackets now living paycheck to paycheck: Study

Paycheck-to-paycheck living isn't anything new, but the troubling trend is now impacting more Americans than ever as rising borrowing costs and inflation take a toll.

Inflation, mortgage rates over 7% and credit card APR's north of 20% have pushed all income brackets into living paycheck to paycheck, according to a new survey from Lending Club Bank.

"In July 2023, 61% of U.S. consumers live paycheck to paycheck, unchanged from June 2023, but 2 percentage points higher than July 2022. Generally, more consumers of all income brackets reported living paycheck to paycheck in July 2023 than last year," Alia Dudum, a money expert at LendingClub told FOX Business. 

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"The data indicates the persistent financial challenges and inflationary pressures a significant portion of the U.S. population faces," Dudum said.

Dudum said the study revealed living "paycheck-to-paycheck" is independent of how much money one makes, and a majority of Americans need their next paycheck to cover their monthly financial outflows. 

"With the cost of consumer goods increasing, coupled with a higher cost of living, many Americans have less available cash every month, which reduces their overall financial cushion and puts near-term pressure on their ability to save," Dudum explained.

"At the same time, rising interest rates make carrying a balance on credit cards even more expensive, meaning servicing that debt costs more, leaving less for savings."

The Federal Reserve has raised interest rates 11 times since March 2022. 

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Dudum notes that some consumers are adjusting their spending behaviors, but this is allowing them to tread water, not get ahead.

Twenty-one percent of paycheck-to-paycheck consumers cite nonessential spending as one reason — but not the top reason — for their financial lifestyle, she says.

"This means that about 6% of the U.S. adult population can be considered ‘discretionary’ paycheck-to-paycheck consumers, as their financial lifestyle is due to nonessential spending, while 13% of U.S. consumers live paycheck to paycheck at least partly because of nonessential spending," Dudum noted. 

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"Knowing the fundamentals around budgeting, saving, debt management, investing, retirement planning and more are important aspects of building financial health and reaching financial goals," she says. 

People like to splurge on themselves, even when it isn’t necessary. Seventy-four percent of consumers admit to including "nice-to-have" items in their grocery carts at least some of the time, and 70% say the same for their retail purchases, Dudum reported.

"For grocery shoppers, desserts, candy and sodas were among the most common indulgences, with 41% citing this as their latest grocery splurge. Clothing emerged as the top non-grocery splurge, followed by health and beauty," added Dudum. 

According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, U.S. consumer credit card debt has risen to an all-time high of $1.03 trillion as of the second quarter of 2023. 

"The reality is that many Americans are using credit cards as a crutch instead of a tool," Dudum told FOX Business. "Americans have an average of four credit cards and are swiping on those cards without thinking about the consequences of carrying high-interest credit card debt at variable rates."

Even as consumers adjust their spending behavior to meet the challenges of the current economic environment, there remains a financial backlog they will carry into the foreseeable future, she explained.

"The average consumer holds outstanding credit card balances equivalent to 35% of their available savings, but those living paycheck to paycheck tend to have higher credit card debt relative to their savings level," Dudum added. 

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"The data finds that consumers living paycheck to paycheck without issues paying bills have average outstanding credit card balances equivalent to 62% of their available savings, while those with issues paying monthly bills carry balances of 157% of their available savings, meaning they would still have a balance even if they emptied their savings accounts."

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