The Western Journal

Biden-Era Inflation Continues to Decimate American Bank Accounts

The provided text discusses the financial struggles facing American consumers, highlighting a significant rise in​ credit card ​and auto ‍loan delinquencies. As reported by The Wall Street Journal, nearly 10% of credit card balances⁢ and 8% of auto loan balances have become overdue, marking the highest level of credit card delinquencies seen in over a decade. This trend has been linked to rising living costs and a deteriorating job market under the Biden administration,‍ with ‍inflation rising over 20% since January 2021.

Additionally, interest rates for ⁤credit cards have surged to an average of 21.51%, and ‌car loan rates reached 8.2%, making payments less affordable. Job growth has slowed, with unemployment⁢ increasing ⁤to 4.2%, which compounds the financial strain⁣ on households.⁣ As a result, consumer savings have dwindled sharply, dropping from over 25% during the COVID-19 pandemic to just 2.9% by July. Major lenders are experiencing⁤ charge-offs, with expectations that delinquency rates‌ will remain high into 2024. these economic challenges⁢ are causing significant ⁢concern for American consumers as they grapple with higher costs and ‍financial insecurity.


Americans are having an increasingly hard time making their credit card and car payments as Biden-era price increases and a worsening labor market have decimated their pocketbooks, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Nearly 10 percent of credit-card balances and 8 percent of auto loan balances became past due in the last year — the highest rate of credit card delinquencies the U.S. has seen in over a decade, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Executives at major lenders like Citigroup and Ally Financial have noted the trend, with Ally’s stock falling 18 percent last Tuesday after its Chief Financial Officer Russ Hutchinson reported the quantity of charge-offs — balances that the company wrote off because borrowers were unlikely to pay — was higher than expected in July and August, the WSJ reported.

“[Borrowers at Ally] have been struggling with the cost of living and now are struggling with an employment picture that’s worse,” Hutchinson told the WSJ.

The increase in un-repaid loans is expected to continue, with Bread Financial — a credit-card issuer that serves more lower-income borrowers than larger financial institutions — expecting the rate to remain elevated through the end of 2024, while fellow credit-card issuer Synchrony Financial said it is experiencing higher delinquency rates than before the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the WSJ.

Prices have risen more than 20 percent since President Joe Biden took office in January 2021, peaking at 9 percent in June 2022. Inflation sat at just 1.4 percent at the end of former President Donald Trump’s term.

Alongside elevated prices, interest rates for credit cards have also increased, climbing to 21.51 percent as of May, up from roughly 15 percent in 2019, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (FRED). The Federal Reserve has held its target federal funds rate at a 23-year high range of 5.25 percent to 5.50 percent for eight straight Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meetings in order to combat inflation.

Elevated rates hike interest payments, and, consequently, have helped drive the surge in overdue balances. Delinquencies reached their highest level in the first quarter of 2024 since the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia began tracking the metric in 2012, as total revolving balances rose to $628.6 billion.

High rates have also made car payments less affordable, with the rate on a 60-month loan for a new car hitting 8.2 percent in May, up from 5.3 percent in 2019, the WSJ reported.

In addition to inflation and high borrowing costs, the U.S. “employment picture” has also worsened, with job growth coming in below economist expectations in both July and August, and unemployment currently sitting at 4.2 percent, well above the 3.4 percent rate seen in April 2023, according to FRED.

Faced with the combination of high interest rates, price increases and joblessness, American consumers have hemorrhaged savings, with the personal savings rate — the percentage of disposable income that Americans have saved — falling from over 25 percent during the COVID-19 pandemic to just 2.9 percent percent in July.

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