Political Calculations
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08 January 2026
Data Visualization of Annual Expenditure Shares by Major Categories of Consumer Expenditures, 2024

In 2024, the average American household "consumer unit" spent $78,535 on everything. That includes things like housing, transportation, food, personal insurance and pensions, healthcare, entertainment, apparel and services, education, cash contributions, alcoholic beverages, personal care products and services, reading materials, tobacco products and smoking supplies, and whatever miscellaneous consumer products there are that don't fit into any of these categories.

That's according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Consumer Expenditures report for 2024, whose publication was twice delayed until 19 December 2025. The report is compiled as part of the Consumer Expenditure Surveys program, which provides insight into what the average American "consumer unit", to use the BLS' term of endearment that roughly corresponds to households, got for all the money they spent in 2024.

That's useful information, which is why the results of the Consumer Expenditures surveys are used to determine the weighting of various consumer spending categories within the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the most commonly cited measure of inflation for the U.S. economy.

Because the data is used this way, it's important to track how the composition of consumer spending changes over time. For example, because the Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA) made health insurance much more costly, changes in the cost of health insurance has a bigger effect on consumer price inflation today than they did before the ACA was passed. Meanwhile, the amount that Americans spend on apparel has declined over time, so changes in apparel prices today have a smaller effect on the consumer price index than what they had back in the early 1980s when the survey began.

The Big Picture

Our first chart presents the average annual amount of consumer expenditures by American "consumer unit" households in each of the 41 years from 1984 through 2024.

Average Annual Total Expenditures per Household Consumer Unit, 1984-2024

These figures represent the nominal, or non-inflation adjusted, total average consumer spending in each year. As you can see, recent years have seen the amount the average American household consumer units spend rise sharply because of the high inflation unleashed during this period. Average household consumer unit expenditures grew from $61,334 in 2020 to $78,535 in 2024.

Growth of Consumer Expenditures by Major Categories

The next chart breaks out that spending into major expenditure categories, such as housing, transportation, food, life insurance & pension savings & Social Security, health insurance & medical expenses, entertainment, charitable contributions, apparel & other products, and education, to put them in order from highest to lowest:

Major Categories of Average Annual Expenditures per Household Consumer Unit, 1984-2024

This chart verifies spending is up substantially in nearly every major consumer expenditure category, with housing, transportation, and food seeing the most rapid increases from 2021 through 2024.

Changing Shares of Major Categories of Consumer Expenditures Over Time

The third chart reveals the trends for these categories, showing how their individual share of total average annual consumer expenditures has been changing since 1984.

Percent Share of Major Categories of Average Annual Expenditures per Household Consumer Unit, 1984-2024

Our final chart assembles all these categories together to reveal how the overall composition of household consumer unit expenditures has changed from 1984 through 2024. The major categories of consumer spending that have had a falling share of total consumer spending over time are shown in shades of green, those claiming a rising share over time are shown in shades of purple.

Percent Share of Major Categories of Average Annual Expenditures per Household Consumer Unit, 1984-2024

References

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Consumer Expenditure Survey. Multiyear Tables. [PDF Documents: 1984-1991, 1992-1999, 2000-2005, 2006-2012, 2013-2020. Excel spreadsheet: 2021-2024]. Reference URL: https://www.bls.gov/cex/home.htm. 19 December 2025. 

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07 January 2026
Median Household Income - US Map

Motio Research's initial estimate of U.S. median household income for November 2025 is $87,160. This estimate represents a $920 (or a little over one percent) increase over its initial $86,240 estimate for September 2025.

Because the Current Population Survey data the firm uses to generate its median household income estimates wasn't collected by the U.S. Census Bureau during the Senate Democrats' government shutdown fiasco, the firm doesn't have a solid estimate for October 2025's median household income backed by its established methodology.

The firm develops its estimates using income data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau through its monthly Current Population Survey, which is conducted during the week containing the 12th day of the month following the month in which its data applies. For the October 2025, the government shutdown blocked the Census Bureau from conducting the monthly survey because no funding had been authorized to perform it.

Motio Research however was able to impute an estimate for October 2025 in its Real Median Household Income Index, in which the median household income of January 2010 is assigned a value of 100 and the values for subsequent months are indexed with respect to that base value. The initial value of the firm's U.S. Real Median Household Income Index for October 2025 was imputed to be 119.0 while its index value for November 2025 is 119.2.

The following screenshot of Motio Research's interactive chart shows how this index has changed from January 2010 through November 2025:

Screenshot of Motio Research U.S. Real Median Household Income Index (MHII) from January 2010 through November 2025

The disruption of the 43-day-long federal government shutdown has posed a number of challenges for everyone who uses the government's statistics for their analyses. Many government agencies are still getting caught up, which will likely continue for several months to come.

Analyst's Notes

Political Calculations produces median household income estimates using other original data sources that complement Motio Research's survey-based estimates. The good news is we'll be able to generate solid estimates of median household income for both October and November 2025 using our alternate methodology, but the bad news is that will have to wait until the Bureau of Economic Analysis releases its aggregate wage and salary compensation data for these months on 29 January 2025.

In the meantime, we do have the ability to project what our estimates will be. We anticipate our median household income estimates will be in the ballpark of $85,314 for October 2025 and $85,606 for November 2025.

Regular readers will recall our observations that a significant gap has developed between Motio Research's estimates and ours. We have an interesting hypothesis why that is, which we'll present in a separate analysis sometime in early February 2025 after we also have the aggregate income data for December 2025.

Between now and then, we'll update this article with our estimates for October and November 2025 on or shortly after 29 January 2025.

Image credit: U.S. Census Bureau. We modified the public domain image to make it more generally applicable beyond reporting the median household income from 2022.

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06 January 2026
An editorial cartoon of a Wall Street bear looking at a chart labeled '2025 NET FAVORABLE DIVIDEND ACTIONS' and shows the value '-208'. Image generated by Microsoft Copilot Designer.

2025 was a lackluster year for dividend paying firms in the U.S. stock market.

That outcome can be verified with a single number. The net number of favorable dividend actions announced by dividend paying companies was negative in 2025, with 208 more firms announcing unfavorable changes like decreases or omissions in their dividend payouts than firms announcing favorable changes like increases or those that paid extra dividends to shareholders. Ten of the twelve months of 2025 registered a negative net result by this simple metric.

What made the year a lackluster one rather than an outright bad year is that most of the decrease came in the form of fewer firms announcing dividend increases. 2025 continued a now three-year long trend on that count, avoiding the fate of becoming a bad year with the number of firms announcing unfavorable changes holding relatively stable during the year.

The following chart shows the number of dividend increases and decreases announced by dividend-paying firms in each of the last five quarters from 2024-Q4 through 2025-Q4. It reveals most of the bad news for dividend paying firms occurred in the first quarter of 2025, with a less negative performance in the remaining quarters of the year, which agrees with the general pattern we observed in each month's net favorable dividend actions.

Number of U.S. Firms Increasing and Decreasing Dividends by Quarter, 2024-Q4 through 2025-Q4

Our next chart focuses on the number of dividend increases and decreases announced each month from January 2004 through December 2025. Here's where you can see that the falling number of dividend increases follows a pattern that has become established since the beginning of 2023 even as the number of dividend decreases remains well below a threshold that indicates recessionary conditions are present in the U.S. economy.

Number of Public U.S. Firms Increasing or Decreasing their Dividends Each Month, January 2004 - December 2025

Finally, the following table tallies up all the favorable and unfavorable changes recorded by dividend paying firms in the U.S. stock market for the month of December 2025. It also shows the month-over-month (MoM) and year-over-year (YoY) changes for December 2025's dividend metadata.

Dividend Changes in December 2025
   Dec-2025  Nov-2025    MoM  Dec-2024    YoY
Total Declarations 5,207 4,948 259 5,374 -167
Favorable 244 193 51 246 -2
- Increases 117 134 -17 128 -11
- Special/Extra 126 59 67 111 15
- Resumed 1 0 1 7 -6
Unfavorable 21 10 11 10 11
- Decreases 21 10 11 10 11
- Omitted/Passed 0 0 0 ◀▶ 0 0 ◀▶

The number of dividend decreases in December 2025 was notably higher than in the previous month of November 2025 and in December 2024, but remains well below the recessionary condition threshold. The good news, such as it is, is that the year-over-year number of favorable changes was only down by two, which suggests that three-year-long negative trend may be close to ending.

Here's hoping 2026 will become a net positive year for the U.S. stock market's dividend paying companies!

References

Standard and Poor. S&P Market Attributes Web File. [Excel Spreadsheet]. Accessed 2 January 2026.

Image Credit: Microsoft Copilot Designer. Prompt: "An editorial cartoon of a Wall Street bear looking at a chart labeled '2025 NET FAVORABLE DIVIDEND ACTIONS' and shows the value '-208'".

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05 January 2026
An editorial cartoon of a Wall Street bull and bear watching the New Year's Eve ball drop to start 2026 and screaming with fear. Image generated with Microsoft Copilot Designer.

S&P 500 (Index: SPX) investors enjoyed a relatively quiet, nearly news free two weeks to end 2025. The index set a new record high of 6,932.05 just before the Christmas Day holiday, before retreating 1.2% in the next week on little-to-no significant market-moving news to close out 2025 at 6,845.50. On 2026's first day of trading, the index rose to 6,858.47, just 1.1% below its 24 December 2025 record high close, as investors started the year with little-to-no market moving news that could meaningfully alter their outlooks for the year-to-come.

And, we might add, no indication of any impending geopolitical event with the potential to reshape expectations for a global industry.

Which is to say it is quite possible we'll be starting the first full trading week of 2026 with a bang. Since that will be a story we cover in the next edition of the S&P 500 chaos series, let's close out 2025 properly with the final update to the alternative futures chart for 2025-Q4.

Alternative Futures - S&P 500 - 2025Q4 - Standard Model (m=-2.0 from 28 Apr 2025) - Snapshot on 26 Dec 2025

Through Friday, 2 January 2026, we find the S&P 500's is tracking along in the middle of the new redzone forecast range we added to the chart a week earlier, which assumes investors are focusing their forward-looking attention on the current quarter of 2026-Q1.

The thing to pay attention to in the week ahead is how the expectations for oil prices change as a consequence to the weekend's geopolitical event. To help set that stage, here are the market-moving headlines that were setting investor expectations during the past two holiday-shortened trading weeks.

Monday, 22 December 2025
Tuesday, 23 December 2025
Wednesday, 24 December 2025
Friday, 26 December 2025
Monday, 29 December 2025
Tuesday, 30 December 2025
Wednesday, 31 December 2025
Friday, 2 January 2026

The CME Group's FedWatch Tool continues to anticipate additional quarter point rate cuts on 18 March (2026-Q1) and 29 July (2026-Q3), with no other rate cuts projected in 2026.

The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tool's first estimate of real GDP growth in the U.S. during 2025-Q4 is +3.0%. Meanwhile, the BEA's first official estimate of GDP in the preceding quarter of 2025-Q3 came in at 4.3%, much higher than the GDPNow tool's final projection of +3.5% growth for that long since ended quarter.

Image credit: Microsoft Copilot Designer. Prompt: "An editorial cartoon of a Wall Street bull and bear watching the New Year's Eve ball drop to start 2026 and screaming with fear".

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02 January 2026
An editorial cartoon of a boss and Uncle Sam sitting at a table marked as 'PAYROLL'. The boss is setting out stacks of cash to pay employees and Uncle Sam is taking part of that money. Image generated by Microsoft Copilot Designer

How much money will the U.S. government let you keep out of each of your regular paychecks in 2026?

2025 saw big changes to U.S. income taxes, mainly in the form of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act making the income tax cuts that were originally passed in 2017 and set to expire at the end of 2025 permanent. Without those changes, nearly all Americans would have been in for an income tax shock in 2026.

If they hadn't been, the higher income tax rates that prevailed back in 2017 would have come back into full force. If you're like many Americans, chances are you wouldn't have noticed until you got your first paycheck in the new year. That would be when you would direct evidence of how much more ol' Uncle Sam is gouging you. Fortunately, that nasty situation was avoided and the changes to how much the U.S. government is taking out of every one of your paychecks are pretty small by comparison. Compared to 2025, the various withholding levels have been adjusted for inflation and that's about all.

But inflation adjustments may not be the only changes that affect the bottom line of your paycheck. If you changed the contribution percentage to your 401(k) or 403(b) retirement savings plans, both the amount that goes these plans and the amount of your federal withholding taxes will change. Likewise if you use changed your contributions for a tax-deferred flexible spending account for covering your dependent or health care expenses.

Your 2026 paycheck may also see a change to its top line. If you get a raise, for example, that will affect the bottom line of your paycheck. The question is how much.

Our 2026 paycheck tool can help you find out what your paycheck will look like before you even see your first paycheck of the year! If you're reading this article on a site that republishes our RSS news feed, please click through to our site to access a working version of the tool. Otherwise, you're more than welcome to enter whatever numbers you want to consider for what your paychecks might look like in 2026.

But if you really want to see something, after you run the numbers for 2026, please check out our paycheck tool using 2017's income tax rates with your 2026 income to get an indication of how different your paycheck could have been without the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025.

Your Paycheck and Tax Withholding Data
Category Input Data Values
Basic Pay Data Current Annual Pay
Pay Period
Federal Withholding Data Filing Status
Have you filed a new IRS Form W-4 with your employer since 2019?
Number of Withholding Allowances (from your pre-2020 IRS Form W-4 if you haven't)
Extra Tax to Withhold per Paycheck (as requested on your IRS Form W-4)
401(k) or 403(b) Contributions Pre-Tax Contributions (%)
After Tax Contributions (%)
Flexible Spending Account Annual Contribution Data Health Care Spending Account
Dependent Care Spending Account
What if You Had a Raise? Desired Raise (%)

Your "Typical" Paycheck Data
Category Calculated Results Values
Basic Income Data Proposed Annual Salary (Including Raise!)
Typical Paycheck Amount
Federal Tax Withholding Amounts U.S. Federal Income Taxes
U.S. Social Security Taxes
U.S. Medicare Taxes
U.S. Additional "Medicare" Taxes (If Applicable)
401(k) or 403(b) Contributions Pre-Tax Contributions
After-Tax Contributions
Total Contributions
Flexible Spending Account Contributions Health Care Spending Account
Dependent Care Spending Account
Your Paycheck's Bottom Line
Take Home Pay Estimate Basic Net Paycheck Amount
... But, After Social Security's Taxable Income Cap Is Reached, It Becomes (If Applicable, for a Full Paycheck)
... And Then, After Additional Medicare Tax Income Threshold Is Reached, It Becomes (If Applicable, for a Full Paycheck)

The tool's results convey how much money the IRS withholds for federal taxes from each of your paychecks in 2026. There are however a number of factors that will complicate your withholding tax results based upon how much you cumulatively earn during the year.

For example, once your cumulative income reaches $184,500 or higher, you will no longer have Social Security's payroll tax of your income deducted from your paycheck, which is 6.2% if you're an employee, but which doubles to 12.4% if you're self-employed (the self-employed pay both the employee and employer payroll taxes). Our tool is designed to provide withholding tax estimates for the majority of Americans who are employed by others. People making this amount of money don't really get a break however because they've already been pushed into a higher tax bracket - they are paying higher regular income tax rates than those paid by over half of all income-earning American households.

There's also the complication provided by the so-called "Additional Medicare Tax" that your employer is required to begin withholding from your paycheck if, and as soon as, your year-to-date income rises above the $200,000 mark. This surtax of 0.9% of gross income was imposed by the "Affordable Care Act" (a.k.a. "Obamacare") in 2010, which is still in effect. Since the money collected through this surtax does not directly support the Medicare program, unlike the real Medicare payroll taxes paid by you and your employer, it is really best thought of as an additional income tax. That additional income tax is not adjusted for inflation, which means that those who must pay it are subject to 1970s-style income tax bracket creep, even though the tax was sold on the claim that it would be limited to only very high income earners.

In the tool above, when the amount of your annual 401(k) or 403(b) retirement savings contributions exceed the annual limits set by law, we've limited the results our tool provides to be those consistent with their statutory limits, and will do so as if you specifically set the percentage contributions for these contributions with that in mind. Our tool does not consider whether you might take advantage of the "catch-up" provisions in the law that are available to individuals Age 50 or older. For example, individuals Age 50 to 59 can increase their annual contributions by $8,000 in 2026 (up from $7,500 in 2025). Meanwhile, individuals Age 60 to 63 can contribute up to an extra $11,250 beyond the standard maximum contribution to their tax-deferred retirement savings account.

Elsewhere on the Web

There are other salary and hourly paycheck calculators like this on the Internet, including the very well done tools available at PaycheckCity.com. PaycheckCity's State Salary Paycheck Calculators allow you to determine the amount of state income tax withholding that will be taken out of your paycheck in addition to what the federal government will take out. Payroll processing giant ADP also has a salary paycheck calculator that will give you good results. We still find the format of PaycheckCity's calculators to be more user friendly, but ADP's version has the benefit of having an all-in-one user interface.

If however you live in one of the states that have no taxes on earned income (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, or Wyoming), our tool above will provide you with a very good estimate of your actual take-home pay after Uncle Sam has gotten his dirty ape paws all over it.

Previously on Political Calculations

We've been in the business of calculating people's paychecks (not including state income tax withholding) since 2005!

Image Credit: Microsoft Copilot Designer. Prompt: "An editorial cartoon of a boss and Uncle Sam sitting at a table marked as 'PAYROLL'. The boss is setting out stacks of cash to pay employees and Uncle Sam is taking part of that money."

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About Political Calculations

Welcome to the blogosphere's toolchest! Here, unlike other blogs dedicated to analyzing current events, we create easy-to-use, simple tools to do the math related to them so you can get in on the action too! If you would like to learn more about these tools, or if you would like to contribute ideas to develop for this blog, please e-mail us at:

ironman at politicalcalculations

Thanks in advance!

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