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NY Fed Report finds that gas prices are increasing and affecting lower income groups harder

Fuel costs are rising due to the Middle East conflict, and this is putting pressure on households with lower incomes. Those who have more money can navigate the situation better.

In a report published on Wednesday, New York Fed analysts wrote that "Households experienced very different gasoline expenditures" following the start of the Middle East war. The conflict has 'roiled global supply chain and sent gasoline prices soaring.

The report stated that in March, wealthy households were able increase their spending to keep up with higher gasoline prices, but maintain the same real consumption level. Meanwhile, low-income households saw their nominal spending rise, while their actual consumption of gasoline decreased.

The blog post said that lower-income households could have responded by moving to cheaper options. "Potentially, they may have substituted public transport or carpooling where available," it stated.

The blog post noted that the current experience is similar to the last energy shock four years ago, when Russia invaded Ukraine. However, now the gap between income levels and consumption trends has become "quantitatively greater."

The New York Fed's report is part of a series done by the bank's analysts in recent days to examine diverging economic perspectives?between households with high and low incomes?in the U.S.

The rising gasoline prices are putting pressure on American households, and pushing inflation to high levels.

(source: Reuters)