CBS/YouGov Poll: Fewer See Prices Rising, But Most Say Middle Class Is Falling Behind
A new CBS News/YouGov poll of 2,425 U.S. adults conducted Feb. 3–5, 2026 finds that while most Americans still say prices are rising, fewer feel that way than in the fall, suggesting some see inflation stabilizing even as cost‑of‑living anger persists. Large majorities now say it is harder than for prior generations to buy a house, get a good job or raise a family, and most believe economic opportunities are increasing for the wealthy but shrinking for the middle class, with a widening perceived gap between the richest and everyone else. Views of the broader economy remain downbeat: most respondents expect conditions to get worse in the next year and only about one in five foresee a growing or booming economy, even as higher‑income, stock‑exposed households are far more likely to say their own finances are good. Lower‑income Americans report cutting discretionary spending and say winter utility bills are a hardship, while higher‑income respondents largely plan to maintain their current spending levels. On the jobs front, a majority of workers still feel at least somewhat secure in their positions, but the share feeling very secure has ticked down since October, and most people say finding the kind of job they want would be difficult regardless of their views on AI, with those who expect AI to cut jobs even more pessimistic.
📌 Key Facts
- Survey: CBS News/YouGov national poll of 2,425 U.S. adults, conducted Feb. 3–5, 2026, margin of error ±2.4 points
- Inflation perceptions: Most still say prices are rising, but that share is lower than in fall 2025, indicating some see price growth stabilizing
- Opportunity gap: Most respondents say opportunities are increasing for the wealthy but decreasing for the middle class, and think it is harder now to buy a home, get a good job or raise a family than for previous generations
- Finances: Higher‑income, stock‑exposed households report better financial conditions and plan to keep spending, while lower‑income respondents are cutting back and cite utility costs as a hardship
- Jobs: A majority feel at least somewhat secure in their jobs, but fewer feel very secure than in October, and most think finding a desirable job would be difficult
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