While macroeconomic indicators portray a stable landscape, the latest Consumer Stress Legal Index (CSLI) tells a grimmer story. The index climbed 9.4% in the second quarter, driven by a 12.2% annual increase in foreclosure-related legal requests and a 28.7% jump in bankruptcy filings. These metrics, often viewed as leading indicators for broader government data, suggest that the financial cushion for many families has evaporated.
Matt Layton, senior vice president of consumer analytics at LegalShield, warns that headline spending figures fail to account for how purchases are funded. With the expiration of pandemic-era protections and the growing reliance on "buy now, pay later" credit, the appearance of resilience is increasingly fragile. Layton notes that while the top tier of earners continues to spend, the bottom 75% of Americans are facing acute pressures that are now spreading across all income brackets and geographic regions, particularly in the South, Midwest, and West.
Ultimately, the data suggests that retail sales may no longer be an accurate barometer for the average household's financial health. As pandemic-era relief measures fade, the disparity between macro-level growth and individual economic reality is widening, leaving little evidence that conditions will improve in the near term.




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