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The K-SHAPED ECONOMY

More Americans are trying “No Spend January” as savings rate hits three-year low

Google searches for the spending freeze hit a new high, as nearly half of Americans say life feels “really expensive.”

Hyunsoo Rim

January can be a hard enough month as it is. For many Americans, a new calendar brings with it freezing weather — like the snowstorms that hit the East Coast over the weekend — a return to work from the festive season, and a mental reset. And some people make it even harder by piling on an extra challenge for the month, swearing off things like alcohol, sugar, or meat. This year, that list has a prominent addition: shopping.

According to a new survey by NerdWallet, more than a quarter of Americans have tried “No Spend January” at least once, pausing all discretionary spending and limiting purchases to essentials like bills and groceries for 31 days. 12% said they started one in 2026, with 44% of respondents saying that “life feels really expensive” right now. 

nospendjanuary
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The trend, different from other January resets centered on drinking and dietary changes, has recently gained traction on social media, as Gen Z and millennials increasingly take part in the thrifty challenge. Though not as well known as its alcohol- and meat-free peers, Google search interest for “no spend january” in the US just hit an all-time high, up 67% year on year — growing faster than the 47% increase for “dry january” and the declining search volume for “veganuary.” 

And this might be more than just a performative frugality. Inflation remains elevated, especially for everyday essentials, while hiring has slowed, leaving more consumers financially squeezed. The personal saving rate fell sharply to a three-year low in November, per last week’s data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis — hovering near 2008 levels, aside from the pandemic period.

Spending has held up in aggregate, but largely due to wealthier households, while lower- and middle-income consumers are increasingly drawing down savings or leaning more on debt as income growth slows — the so-called K-shaped economy.

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Wall Street bonuses hit a new record last year, edging toward $250,000 average

2025 was a pretty good year for US stocks... and new data suggests it was an even better one for workers on Wall Street itself.

In a year that saw pretax profits on the Street rise more than 30% to a record $65 billion, dealmakers, traders, and wealth managers raked in ~$246,900 in bonuses on average — an all-time high — per a new report from New York State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli published on Thursday.

Wall street bonuses chart
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According to DiNapoli, last year’s record $49.2 billion bonus pool (estimated using income tax data without including stock options or other deferred compensation) reflects Wall Street’s “strong performance for much of last year, despite all of the ongoing domestic and international upheavals.”

Standing desk advantage

Americans are spending more of the workday sitting — the jobs driving the trend often come with more money

Software developers sit nearly all day and make six figures. Fast-food workers are on their feet almost nonstop, and earn about $30,000 a year.

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