A medium order of fries at McDonald’s now costs $4.19. Just five years ago, it was $1.79. That’s a 134% increase.
But let’s be clear: this isn’t about fries. This is about a crumbling middle class that can’t afford what used to be fast food—America’s cheapest calories.
The humble potato, once the staple of the poor, is now part of a corporate luxury product served in a paper carton. The very concept of a “value meal” has become a punchline, and the real joke is on the American worker.
While Washington’s bureaucrats and central bank apologists massage numbers to keep the official Consumer Price Index under control, real Americans are living in a different economy—one where food, fuel, shelter, and basic transportation have surged beyond affordability.
Let’s look at actual McDonald’s menu price increases from 2019 to 2024:
We’re not looking at 2% annual inflation. These are 100–200% increases.
This isn’t inflation. It’s extraction—plain and simple.
While prices balloon, wages remain frozen in amber. According to a University of Michigan survey, 44% of middle-income Americans say they’re worse off than a year ago, while just 23% say they’re better off. The overwhelming reason? Prices.
Meanwhile, layoffs continue across sectors—from tech to retail to manufacturing. The job market isn’t recovering—it’s being restructured to favor automation, offshoring, and part-time labor with no benefits.
We’re heading back to a gig economy serfdom, where predictable hours and stable pay are privileges, not rights.
We’re told beef is expensive because of “tight supply” and turkey is scarce due to “avian flu.” There’s truth to that—but it’s not the whole truth.
But here’s the trick: the prices didn’t just increase—they overshot cost pressures. That’s what economists call “greedflation”—price gouging masked by crisis.
Corporations are using disruption as a smokescreen to jack up prices beyond necessity. Their quarterly earnings tell the real story.
Since 2019, the income required to afford a median-priced home in rural America has jumped 105.8%. That’s rural—not coastal, not urban, not gentrified. In the countryside, where land and homes used to be cheap, families now need $74,508 a year to buy what once cost $36,000 annually in income.
Ask yourself: has your income doubled since 2019? No? Then you’re falling behind. Fast.
The average price of a new car is now $49,105. That’s not a luxury vehicle. That’s your average, economy-class family car—loaded with sensors that break, electronics that glitch, and warranties timed perfectly to expire just before the problems start.
This isn’t a bug. It’s a business model.
Planned obsolescence means a car is no longer a tool for 20 years—it’s a subscription, whether you're leasing it or financing it with 72-month debt. And when it breaks? The repair costs will make you wish you’d walked.
You were told a college degree was your ticket to a better life. That was a lie.
Youth unemployment is rising. Recent college grads are working service jobs, going back to school, or simply disappearing from the workforce. Economists now admit that a bachelor's degree is no longer a reliable path to professional employment.
Yet we’ve saddled a generation with six figures of student debt, for credentials that barely get them an entry-level email job.
The education-industrial complex cashed the checks, and now the grads are stuck holding the bag.
Shipping activity across the U.S. has plummeted:
Translation: less stuff is being bought, sold, and shipped. That means fewer goods in motion, fewer workers employed, and fewer paychecks flowing.
Idle trains and empty shipping containers don’t pay taxes. They don’t buy burgers or homes. They signal something deeper: a system slowing down, not speeding up.
Only 21% of middle-income Americans believe they’ll be better off next year, while 34% expect to be worse off, according to Primerica. This is a reversal from 2020, when optimism still held.
People are cutting back—hard. Even households making $115,000 a year are turning off the lights to save on power bills and crafting DIY Christmas gifts out of painted rocks.
Debt is ballooning. Credit cards are maxed. Medical bills are forcing families into bankruptcy. Even the “comfortable” class is running scared.
Let’s not forget how we got here.
This isn’t bad luck. This was deliberate policy—designed to preserve the wealth of the top 1% while pacifying the masses with credit cards and Netflix.
And now? The credit cards are maxed, the bills are due, and the chickens are coming home to roost.
The $4 French fry is not just a menu item. It’s a symbol of everything that’s gone wrong:
What we’re witnessing isn’t just economic erosion. It’s the slow-motion collapse of the American middle class, gutted by globalism, debt, and cowardice.
And unless there’s a radical shift—a gut renovation of monetary policy, political will, and industrial backbone—this ride ends at the bottom.
No bailout is coming. It's on us.
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