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Abstract Middle-class Americans maintain a structurally unequal relationship with the country’s largest banks. This asymmetry stems from persistent financial literacy gaps, the complexity of modern banking products, behavioral design that nudges consumers into costlier outcomes, and the scale advantages enjoyed by megabanks. Although regulators intervene episodically—most visibly in cases like Wells Fargo’s fake accounts scandal […]
Introduction Middle-class voters are the backbone of the American electorate. Their votes decide elections, and their voices shape national policy. In the 2020 presidential election, for example, middle-class suburban voters played a critical role in swinging key battleground states, underscoring their influence on electoral outcomes. Yet politicians often speak about the middle class in vague, […]
The lingering shadows of the Gilded Age stretch into the present, casting a long silhouette over America’s economic landscape. Families like the Waltons, the Mars clan, and the Cargill-MacMillans stand as pillars of enduring wealth, their fortunes built over decades and, in some cases, centuries. These dynasties have accumulated vast resources and mastered the art […]
If you’ve been waiting for a sign to make big moves with your finances, this is it. The Federal Reserve just made its first interest rate cut since 2020, slashing the federal funds rate by a full half percentage point. This is no small step—it’s a loud and clear signal that the era of “cheap […]
You’re not alone if you’ve noticed your savings dwindling or are finding it more challenging to set aside money. The U.S. personal savings rate has plummeted in recent months, reaching a low of 2.9% as of July 2024, a stark contrast to the pandemic peak of nearly 35% in April 2020. This decline is driven […]
Millions of Americans are what lenders call “credit invisible.” They don’t have enough history to generate a traditional FICO score, yet they pay rent, utilities, phone bills, and manage bank accounts every month. Until recently, none of that counted. But...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
Credit scores in the U.S. are slipping, and fast. The average FICO® Score has dropped to 715 in 2025, down from its pandemic-era highs. For some borrowers, especially younger Americans and those carrying heavy balances, the decline has been much...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
Bottom line: The deceased person’s accounts don’t just vanish—they’re typically settled by the estate. Reports will eventually reflect a “deceased” indicator, and you’ll coordinate closures with lenders. Survivors aren’t automatically liable. What Changes on the Credit File Deceased indicator: After...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
Credit bureaus allow a spouse or court-appointed personal representative/executor to request the decedent’s credit report by mail with proof (death certificate + proof of authority + your ID). That’s standard practice per the bureaus’ own instructions. See Experian, Equifax, and...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
Reality Check If you’re the first in your family to go to college, you don’t just pick a major—you pick a financing model. And that choice...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
Reality Check You shouldn’t need a translator to pay for college. Yet for too many middle-class families, the FAFSA feels like a maze with moving walls—new...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
Reality Check You’re looking at your budget and your chest gets tight. Rent, groceries that cost more than last year, childcare, car insurance. And now those...
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Reality Check Your paycheck stops; your life doesn’t. It’s Day 31 of the shutdown. Rent is due today, the daycare draft hits tomorrow, and you’re staring...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
The Plain‑English Take There was a time when a steady paycheck, a pension, and a gold watch weren’t a fantasy. They were the deal. If you...
By FMC Editorial Team
Most middle-class households aren’t “bad with money.” They’re paying a quiet tax in fixed costs and frictions—housing, healthcare, childcare, and high-APR debt—that eat the raise before...
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Why this matters (more than your will) A once-a-year habit that keeps your intentions aligned with your paperwork—and your family out of avoidable messes. For a...
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Reality Check You don’t need another lecture. You need a plan that works in the middle of real life—when the rent is due, the car needs...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
You’ve got a will for the house and the car. Good. But what about the stuff that actually runs your life—email, bank logins, bill-pay portals, cloud...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
You can feed a full house without making your card issuer fat and happy. The trick isn’t starving the table—it’s starving the waste. Why the Table...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
Reality Check If you’re the first in your family to go to college, you don’t...
Reality Check You shouldn’t need a translator to pay for college. Yet for too many...
Reality Check You’re looking at your budget and your chest gets tight. Rent, groceries that...