Workers got a raise last month, but they still ended up poorer after inflation took a bigger cut.
Hourly pay went up - prices went up faster, leaving the average paycheck worth less than it was a year ago for the second month in a row.
Wages Trail Inflation Two Months Running
Real wages - what your paycheck is actually worth after prices rise - fell 0.69% year over year in May, following a similar drop in April.
That means the typical worker is losing ground to inflation, even with bigger paychecks landing in their accounts.
The Consumer Price Index - the government's main measure of how fast prices are rising - jumped 4.3% year over year, well above nominal wage growth of 3.4% and far above the Fed's 2% target. May's 4.3% reading was the highest in 38 months.
The gap may sound small on paper, but it adds up. A worker earning $60,000 a year is effectively about $400 behind where they were 12 months ago, even after a nominal raise.
Why it matters: real wage drops tend to feed slower consumer spending, which feeds slower growth across the economy.
Two months of decline doesn't make a trend, but it's the kind of pattern economists watch closely - especially with the Fed already trying to thread the needle between inflation and a softening labor market.
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Food and Fuel Are Driving the Squeeze
The New York Fed flagged the issue last month, warning that CPI inflation - driven partly by rising food prices - will keep pressuring consumers, and the pressure isn't expected to ease soon. But fuel was the bigger driver in May's CPI report, up 23.5% year over year, while food rose 3.1%.
Food is one of the hardest costs for households to cut - you can delay a vacation or skip a new TV, but you can't skip groceries.
When food prices run hot, lower- and middle-income households feel it first and hardest, since they spend a bigger share of their income on essentials.
The knock-on effect for investors: shoppers under price pressure tend to pull back on extras like restaurants, retail, and travel long before they touch the basics.
That's why discretionary categories often weaken before the broader economy shows cracks - they're the canary in the coal mine for consumer health.
The early signs are already showing up in earnings calls, with several major retailers and restaurant chains flagging softer traffic and shoppers trading down to cheaper brands in recent quarters.
What To Watch
Two months of falling real wages isn't a trend yet - six months would be.
But the direction matters - if June's data shows a third straight monthly decline, the read shifts from a temporary wobble to a consumer in real trouble. Core CPI also hit a nine-month high in May, suggesting price pressures go beyond food and fuel.
The next CPI print and the next round of corporate earnings will show whether May was a one-off or the start of something the consumer can't shake.
Keep an eye on retailers, restaurants, and any company that leans on shoppers having extra cash at month's end.
When the average paycheck shrinks in real terms, those are the first lines on the income statement to feel it.
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