U.S. wealth inequality has surged to its highest level in nearly four decades, driven by significant gains for the wealthy amid a stark economic divide, according to recent Federal Reserve data.
Economic data from the Federal Reserve reveals that wealth inequality in the United States has reached its highest concentration in nearly 40 years. This trend is driven by record equity gains and an expanding divergence between upper-income earners and working-class families. While the Trump administration points to positive macroeconomic indicators—including a steady jobs report, reduced inflation, and corporate investment pledges—independent economists warn that a stark “K-shaped” split is forming. This economic divide is amplified by high energy costs stemming from ongoing geopolitical tensions and structural changes, such as the expiration of federal health subsidies, which have disproportionately strained lower-income households.
According to newly released federal data, U.S. wealth inequality has expanded to its highest level in nearly four decades. Figures compiled by the Federal Reserve indicate that as of late 2025, the top 1 percent of American households held 31.7 percent of the nation’s total wealth. In absolute terms, this single percentage of the population controls an estimated $55 trillion in assets, a sum roughly equivalent to the combined holdings of the entire bottom 90 percent of Americans. This represents the most extreme concentration of household wealth recorded since the central bank began tracking the metric in 1989.
The data highlights a growing friction between the political rhetoric surrounding working-class economic empowerment and the statistical realities of the current macroeconomic environment under the second Trump administration. “Donald Trump talks a lot about the working class; his MAGA base is primarily working class, but if you look at the data, the working class is doing very badly in the second Trump administration,” former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, a professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, told reporters. “The real growth in the second Trump administration has been in corporate profits and in the wealth of the people at the top.”
Analysts increasingly use the term “K-shaped” to describe the current economic trajectory. In this framework, the upper arm of the “K” represents higher-income households whose wealth is accelerating, while the lower arm represents the middle and lower classes, who face stagnant real wages and rising costs. The divergence is sharply visible in the financial markets. Throughout 2026, major stock indices have consistently broken record highs, largely propelled by investor enthusiasm and capital deployment surrounding the artificial intelligence (AI) sector. However, this equity boom provides little insulation for the broader public.
According to data from Moody’s Analytics and Gallup, the top 10 percent of households control more than 87 percent of all corporate equity and mutual fund shares, and 87 percent of stock owners live in households earning $100,000 or more annually. Consequently, market gains flow almost exclusively to the upper income bracket. Conversely, middle-income families hold the vast majority of their net worth in residential real estate. With housing price growth slowing nationwide, the primary wealth vehicle for the middle class has failed to keep pace with the stock market’s rapid appreciation. Furthermore, by the end of 2025, higher-income Americans experienced an average annualized wage growth of 3 percent, double the 1.5 percent growth seen by middle-income households, and nearly triple the 1.1 percent rate recorded for low-income workers.
This structural divide has been further exacerbated by geopolitical instability. The ongoing conflict involving Iran has thrown global energy markets into deep volatility, disrupting major supply lines and driving average domestic gasoline prices past $4.50 a gallon. While the surge in energy costs represents an inconvenience for wealthy households, it has forced significant behavioral modifications among lower-income families.
A study published by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Center for Microeconomic Data analyzed nominal and real gasoline consumption across distinct income brackets following the price spike. The findings demonstrated a clear K-shaped pattern in consumer behavior. Low-income households, earning under $40,000, cut their physical consumption of gasoline by approximately 7 percent in March. Despite using less fuel, their nominal spending at the pump rose by 12 percent due to the steep increase in prices. In contrast, high-income households, earning over $125,000, maintained essentially unchanged real consumption habits, reducing physical fuel use by a negligible 1 percent while expanding their nominal spending by 19 percent to absorb the higher costs without altering their daily routines.
The broader job market presents a similarly fractured picture. The Department of Labor’s April jobs report indicated that the U.S. economy added 115,000 nonfarm payroll jobs, outperforming the consensus forecast of 62,000. While the headline unemployment rate held steady at a historically low 4.3 percent, a look beneath the baseline averages reveals persistent demographic and racial disparities. Mohamed El-Erian, a professor at the Wharton School of Business and chief economic adviser at Allianz, noted these discrepancies during a recent public policy forum.
Speaking calmly to an audience of analysts and journalists, El-Erian emphasized that aggregate statistics can mask underlying vulnerabilities. “If you look at the details of the jobs report, you will see, for example, Black and Hispanic unemployment is getting worse, while Asian and white unemployment are staying as is or getting better,” El-Erian stated. “Black unemployment is now twice the level of white unemployment. So, within an economy that looks good at the average, we are seeing major divergences that should be of concern.”
While sectors such as healthcare added 37,000 positions and transportation/warehousing grew by 30,000, manufacturing shed 2,000 jobs in April alone. This brings the total loss in the manufacturing sector to 66,000 jobs over the past 12 months, complicating administration narratives regarding a domestic industrial resurgence. Additionally, the number of individuals working part-time for economic reasons rose by 445,000 to a total of 4.9 million, indicating that a growing number of workers are unable to secure full-time employment.
The Trump administration has robustly defended its record, framing current economic indicators as the foundation of a broad-based “Golden Age” for all American citizens. White House officials frequently cite positive macroeconomic milestones, including an increase in the average annual tax refund, a general reduction in baseline inflation from its post-pandemic peaks, and trillions of dollars in pledged foreign direct investments that the administration asserts will revitalize domestic infrastructure.
The administration has also promoted targeted initiatives, such as the newly implemented baby bonds program, which establishes $1,000 “Trump accounts” for newborns, intended to seed long-term savings for the next generation. However, congressional critics and budget analysts point out that parallel legislative and regulatory choices have altered the social safety net for low-income families.
The latest federal spending package enacted significant funding reductions for Medicaid, state-level healthcare assistance programs, and social services. Furthermore, congressional Republicans permitted the temporary Affordable Care Act (ACA) health insurance subsidies—originally enhanced to lower premium costs for middle- and lower-income families—to officially expire at the end of 2025. According to healthcare policy analysts, the expiration of these subsidies has introduced substantial premium increases for millions of self-employed and working-class families, adding further downward pressure on household budgets at the exact moment wealth concentration at the top has reached record historic thresholds, according to Source Name.

