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U.S. economy in late 2025 shows stark inequality: high-income households drive growth while middle- and lower-income families struggle with stagnant wages and rising prices.
The U.S. economy in late 2025 shows a K-shaped split, with high-income households driving 3.5% spending growth while middle- and lower-income families face stagnant wages and rising prices.
Inflation rose to 2.8% (core PCE: 2.9%), and personal disposable income saw no growth.
Business investment declined 0.3%, hurt by input costs, but massive AI investments by tech giants—projected at $600 billion this year—helped sustain overall growth.
Net exports improved slightly but remain volatile due to shifting tariffs.
Despite Trump’s claims of economic gains from tariffs, markets now expect fewer rate cuts in early 2026, and a full picture of the economy may not emerge until 2026 due to data disruptions from a November government shutdown.
La economía de EE.UU. a finales de 2025 muestra una gran desigualdad: los hogares de altos ingresos impulsan el crecimiento mientras que las familias de ingresos medios y bajos luchan con salarios estancados y precios crecientes.