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looked at in this piece was trying to sort of get a better sense of what the headline metrics might be missing, and indeed they do when we looked into receipts data matching up actual growth and expenses against growth in earnings, we did actually find that lower wage families those, you know, sort of like in the bottom. let's say quintile of the income distribution are coming out behind. yes their wages are growing pretty quickly in percentage terms, but it's not. ping up with the actual dollar spend and beyond that there is this sort of psychological tax that a lot of families feel from inflation. that's harder to quantify. you know that the mental strain of now having to do a lot more price comparisons shopping at multiple grocery stores, managing budgets that used to sort of be on autopilot , that sort of thing. so that was the goal. and as you point out, you know this was all while these numbers are captured, while the job market is still strong while they're away. lot

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