Goldman Sachs reports electricity prices jumped 6.9% in 2025, more than double the 2.9% headline inflation rate.
Let that sink in.
While politicians tell Americans inflation is cooling, the power bill says otherwise.
And analysts warn prices will continue climbing through the end of the decade. Families are projected to see another 6% increase through 2027, with only modest relief afterward.
This isn’t temporary turbulence. It’s a structural shift.
According to analysts, data centers account for 40% of electricity demand growth.
Forty percent.
Artificial intelligence systems, cloud computing hubs, server farms — they don’t run on optimism. They run on electricity. Massive amounts of it.
And supply isn’t keeping pace.
The result? A tight supply-demand balance that pushes prices higher.
Especially in regions like the Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, and California — areas with heavy data center concentration.
In the PJM Interconnection region — which covers 13 states — costs to secure power supplies have exploded. A watchdog group estimates $23 billion in costs attributable to data centers.
Those costs do not disappear.
They land on ratepayers.
The watchdog didn’t mince words. It called the situation a “massive wealth transfer.”
That phrase deserves attention.
Because electricity isn’t optional.
You can cancel streaming subscriptions.
You can cut back on vacations.
You cannot turn off your refrigerator.
When essentials rise faster than inflation, working families absorb the hit.
Lower-income households spend a higher percentage of their income on utilities. That means:
They feel it first. And they feel it hardest.
Goldman estimates higher electricity prices will reduce consumer spending growth by 0.2% and slow economic growth slightly. That may sound small in a boardroom.
On Main Street, it’s real money.
Utility bills are now a campaign issue.
Governors are winning elections on promises to control power costs. The White House has urged tech companies to help fund new power plants. Agreements have been signed. Promises made.
But here’s the question Americans are asking:
Why were families footing the bill in the first place?
If trillion-dollar tech companies need new power plants to fuel AI expansion, shouldn’t those costs be transparently allocated to the beneficiaries?
Markets are supposed to reward innovation — not quietly redistribute costs to people who never signed up to subsidize it.
Electricity underpins everything:
When energy costs rise faster than wages, it erodes economic stability. Quietly. Steadily.
And when the cost increases are tied to infrastructure serving powerful corporate interests, Americans have every right to demand transparency and fairness.
Innovation is welcome. Growth is welcome.
But accountability must come with it.
This story isn’t anti-technology. It’s pro-accountability.
It’s about asking whether essential utilities — the backbone of daily life — are being managed in a way that protects households first.
It’s about recognizing that when basic living costs consistently outpace inflation, the middle class shrinks.
And it’s about understanding that economic sovereignty starts with controlling the essentials: energy, currency, infrastructure.
When those drift beyond the reach of ordinary Americans, frustration grows. Trust erodes.
History shows what follows when families feel squeezed and unheard.
Transparency in rate-setting.
Fair cost allocation.
Grid expansion that doesn’t shift corporate expenses onto households.
Energy policies that prioritize resilience and affordability.
Americans deserve clarity. They deserve fairness. They deserve a system that doesn’t quietly transfer wealth upward through their utility bill.
This isn’t about resisting the future.
It’s about ensuring the future doesn’t leave working families behind.
Electricity prices are rising. The economy is shifting. And financial pressure rarely moves in just one direction.
If you want deeper analysis and early insights, consider joining the Inner Circle — currently offered at a discounted rate.
Energy matters. Freedom matters.
Stay informed. Stay prepared.
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