In a recent conversation with Chris Wallace on CNN Max, Suze Orman highlighted that while the stock market is performing well, it doesn’t reflect how most American households are really doing financially.
“What if I were to tell you that 75% of the people in the United States don’t have $400 to their name in case of an emergency?” Orman said, describing the financial situation of ordinary Americans as “really, really bad.”
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Although we often use the stock market to measure economic health overall, Orman emphasizes that it doesn’t reliably tell us how the everyday American is doing. “On the whole, ordinary human beings in America today are living paycheck to paycheck and they’re not doing well at all,” she explained.
As household debts rise and reliance on credit cards increases, it’s clear that individuals may be in a deeper financial crisis. Last summer, U.S. credit card debt surpassed $1 trillion for the first time, a milestone that Orman pointed to as a symptom of a much larger issue.
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Even as some sectors of the economy show strength, Orman made it clear that inflation makes it difficult for most Americans to keep up. Wallace, taken aback by Orman’s statistics, asked her to elaborate on what she described as a “financial…