Poll: Majority Are ‘Worse Off Financially’ Under Joe Biden, Up 25 Points Since 2021
A majority of voters are “worse off financially” under Joe Biden, up 25 points since he assumed office in 2021, according to a poll.
A majority of voters are “worse off financially” under Joe Biden, up 25 points since he assumed office in 2021, according to a poll.
A majority of Americans believe college is “Not worth the cost because people often graduate without specific job skills and with a large amount of debt to pay off,” a Wall Street Journal-NORC poll found.
Nearly 60 percent of registered U.S. voters say they have “less money in their pocket than they did a year ago,” according to a Fox News poll released on Sunday.
Forty-one percent of American families say their financial position has worsened since President Joe Biden assumed office — the worst result in 37 years, according to a Sunday ABC News/Washington Post survey.
Roughly 1 in 4 millennials say their parents cover their rent, a new poll conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Chartway Credit Union found.
Lawmakers in Florida are hoping to make it a requirement students know how to manage their money before graduating from high school.
A survey finds that during the first quarter of 2020 consumers paid down a record $60 billion pay down in credit card debt.
Nearly six in ten Americans, or 56 percent, say they are now better off than they were last year, up 50 percent from last year alone.