r/Economics

Over half of Americans say health care, a weeklong vacation and a new car are unaffordable: ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll


title: Over half of Americans say health care, a weeklong vacation and a new car are unaffordable: ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll
author: u/OkSeat5245
content
type: redditpost
publication: r/Economics
published: 2026-02-27T15:56:03+00:00
source
url: https://www.reddit.com/r/Economics/comments/1rgaggp/overhalfofamericanssayhealthcareaweeklong/

word_count: 129

Link: https://abcnews.com/Politics/half-americans-health-care-weeklong-vacation-new-car/story?id=130538412

Score: 3370 | Comments: 208 | Subreddit: r/Economics


Top Comments

u/liverpoolFCnut (407 pts):
shocked that only one half of Americans say a week long vacation or a brand new car is now unaffordable! Average price of a new car now is $45k, and the cheapest hotel rooms in safe areas cost over $200/night in places worth visiting.

u/immaculatephotos (76 pts):
I have no sympathy for these car companies and dealerships. They made a killing during covid and now their lots are full and not moving any product. I hope they saved some of those profits

u/RightIzWrong (67 pts):
I’m well educated and a decent paying job, wife, 2 kids. Modest lifestyle, no extravagances. Lost my meager savings during a 3-month job search. Scraping by month to month. Winter break plans this year was: spend 1 day in the city 45 mins from us. My retirement plan is a bullet to the head once I’m unable to work anymore. My kids are super smart and I have exactly $0 to put toward their college tuition when they get there. Life is bleak, I’m falling into depression, and there is no relief in sight.

u/IWantedAPeanutToo (93 pts):
As a non-American, I just want to say how insane it is to put healthcare in the same category as luxuries like week-long vacations and new cars. I think a lot of Americans have grown so used to thinking of fucking healthcare as a luxury that they don’t even realize how twisted that mindset is.

u/EconomistWithaD (73 pts):
Would just like to point out that, as early as the 2000’s, there has been a noticeable decoupling of the link between consumer confidence and consumer spending (https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/files/docs/historical/frbsf/frbsflet/frbsflet20080627.pdf). I believe a paper in JEP labeled the relationship as modest in 2004 (https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/files/docs/historical/frbsf/frbsflet/frbsflet20080627.pdf).

Post-COVID, there are some noticeable trends that suggest that this link is weakening even further (https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/notes/feds-notes/tracking-consumer-sentiment-versus-how-consumers-are-doing-based-on-verified-retail-purchases-20250424.html). And, in fact, REAL retail sales are up between 2019 and 2024 (https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/notes/feds-notes/a-better-way-of-understanding-the-u-s-consumer-decomposing-retail-spending-by-household-income-20241011.html).

This doesn’t suggest that the consumer feelings on the economy are wrong, or out of touch. It does suggest, however, that even if people feel things are worse, they are buying more. Both low income real wages and spending are higher.

u/Leather-Map-8138 (21 pts):
Sometimes helpful to recognize the damage still felt in employment markets tied to the 2008-2009 recession. The average length of unemployment shot up to 40 weeks then, and has remained above 20 weeks ever since. In the fifty years prior to 2008, it might occasionally max out at 20 weeks, ranging between 10 and 20 weeks. This is a key factor in assessing family stress tied to layoffs.

u/PartridgePearTree (13 pts):
I was going to fly to Salt Lake City this June for a family visit. I’m in Phoenix for context. After choosing my flight and paying to choose my seat and have luggage, it was going to be over $400 round trip. For an hour and a half flight. I chose to rent a KOA cabin and I’ll drive there. With gas it may be even but at least I’ll avoid the stress of the airport.

u/Optimal-Bass3142 (13 pts):
Is life easier anywhere else? The rent and home values and Canada are well documented, the European social safety net is amazing but unemployment is horrendous. Is there anywhere on Earth where standards of living are getting better for working people?

u/Un_ntelligent (11 pts):
Pay 600/mo, 9k max out of pocket, 3,500 deductible, 60% co insurance. Hospitalized for 1 night in er for a swollen throat. Catscan and antibiotics, six still didn't know what was wrong. 13k was the bill. I have to cover 6k. Welcome to America

u/whitelowtis (11 pts):
But a lot of the world is a lot better off than the USA, I don't understand why people say it's wealthy when nothing is affordable? What am I missing?

u/ghallway (6 pts):
My father, a high school educated man, was able to raise 4 kids, have a stay at home wife and we could take a two week vacation each year. My wife and I are both college educated, both work, we have two kids and maybe can take a three day vacation about every three years. If my car goes, we can't buy another.