The American economy is starting to look less like a rising tide that lifts all boats and more like two entirely different oceans. Fed officials are increasingly vocal about what they're calling a "two-speed" or "bifurcated" economy—a fancy way of saying the wealthy are doing great while everyone else is treading water.
Fed Officials Sound the Alarm
Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr put it bluntly at a virtual community development event earlier this month: "We have kind of a two-speed economy right now. Wealthier households are doing quite well, most of them, but low-income households, many of them are struggling."
The concern goes beyond just spending patterns. Barr emphasized that job security is becoming a real worry for lower-income Americans. "People are worried about whether if they lost their job, whether they might get a job in the future. And so we have to pay careful attention to making sure that the labor market is solid," he said.
And Barr isn't alone in noticing this split. Fed Chair Jerome Powell brought up the same issue at last month's press conference following the 25-basis-point rate cut. Powell pointed to corporate earnings calls as evidence, noting there's plenty of "anecdotal data" backing this up.
"If you listen to the earnings calls or the reports of big, public, consumer-facing companies, many, many of them are saying that there's a bifurcated economy there and that consumers at the lower end are struggling and buying less and shifting to lower cost products, but that at the top, people are spending at the higher income and wealth," Powell explained.
Living the High Seas Life
Case in point: Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd (RCL). The cruise giant reported in its Q3 earnings last month that customer spending remains remarkably strong, with "greater participation" despite higher ticket prices.
CEO Jason Liberty painted a rosy picture on the earnings call that perfectly illustrates the divide. "The consumer or our guest is strong," Liberty said. "They have great jobs. They have great balance sheets, bank accounts. And they have a strong desire to vacation and build experiences and memories with their friends and family."
Translation: Royal Caribbean's customers aren't just weathering economic uncertainty—they're booking cruises at premium prices without blinking.
The Other Side of the Coin
While affluent Americans are splurging on luxury vacations, the job market tells a darker story for millions of workers. Data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas revealed that U.S. companies have eliminated approximately 1.1 million jobs so far in 2025—the highest level since 2020.
Consumer sentiment reflects this growing divide. The Conference Board's consumer confidence index dropped for the third consecutive month in October, hitting its lowest point in six months. But here's where it gets interesting: confidence actually rose among households earning over $75,000, with the sharpest gains among those pulling in $200,000 or more.
So we've got Fed officials warning about a split economy, cruise executives celebrating their wealthy clientele's spending power, and data showing job cuts at pandemic levels while high earners feel increasingly optimistic. It's not exactly a mystery why economists are concerned about this K-shaped recovery turning into a permanent feature of the American economy.