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ProxCoques | 1 year ago

Also by the Fed: 4 in 10 Americans lack enough money to cover a $400 emergency expense:

https://fortune.com/2023/05/23/inflation-economy-consumer-fi...

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CalRobert|1 year ago

Question EF3. Suppose that you have an emergency expense that costs $400. Based on your current financial situation, how would you pay for this expense?

Response Percent

Put it on my credit card and pay it off in full at the next statement 37

Put it on my credit card and pay it off over time 16

With the money currently in my checking/savings account or with cash 45

Using money from a bank loan or line of credit 3

By borrowing from a friend or family member 10

Using a payday loan, deposit advance, or overdraft 2

By selling something 7

I wouldn't be able to pay for the expense right now 13

Note: Number of unweighted respondents 11,400

from https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/files/2023-suppl...

n4r9|1 year ago

Hard to interpret this. It either shows that 55% do not have enough money to pay the expense, or that 82% may well have the money but 37% would prefer to pay it off after their next paycheck anyway.

j33zusjuice|1 year ago

That question allowed respondents to select multiple. EF2 and EF7 give a very clear picture of the average person’s financial situation.

insane_dreamer|1 year ago

This puts at 35% those for whom $400 would be a hardship (don't have the money on hand). Still a significant amount.

Clent|1 year ago

Those numbers cannot be percentages, they add up to 133.

0xDEAFBEAD|1 year ago

Perhaps because 4 in 10 Americans are bad with money. As jandrewrogers stated, Americans are not good savers. (I believe this is a big contributor to our trade deficit as well.)

xvector|1 year ago

To be honest, you don't really want people saving too much in a healthy economy. You want them spending.