Here's why everyone's talking about a 'K-shaped' economy
[December 02, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — From corporate executives to Wall Street analysts to
Federal Reserve officials, references to the “K-shaped economy” are
rapidly proliferating.
So what does it mean? Simply put, the upper part of the K refers to
higher-income Americans seeing their incomes and wealth rise while the
bottom part points to lower-income households struggling with weaker
income gains and steep prices.
A big reason the term is popping up so often is that it helps explain an
unusually muddy and convoluted period for the U.S. economy. Growth
appears solid, yet hiring is sluggish and the unemployment rate has
ticked up. Overall consumer spending is still rising, but Americans are
less confident. AI-related data center construction is soaring while
factories are laying off workers and home sales are weak. And the stock
market still hovers near record highs even as wage growth is slowing.
It also captures ongoing concerns around affordability, which is much
more of a concern for middle and lower-income households. Persistent
inflation has received renewed political attention after voter anger
over costly rents, groceries, and imported goods helped Democrats win
several high-profile elections last month.
“Those at the bottom are living with the cumulative impacts of price
inflation,” said Peter Atwater, an economics professor at William & Mary
in Virginia. “At the same time, those at the top are benefiting from the
cumulative impact of asset inflation.”
Here are some things to know about the K-shaped economy:

Not an L, U or V
Atwater actually popularized the label “K-shaped economy" during the
pandemic after seeing it crop up on social media. Other economists were
discussing different letters to describe how the COVID recession in 2020
could play out: Would it be a V-shaped recovery, meaning a sharp decline
and then rapid bounce-back? Or would it be U-shaped, meaning a more
gradual rebound? Or, worse, L-shaped: A recession followed by extended
stagnation.
“There was sort of this land-grab for letters," Atwater said. “To me the
letter that made the most sense was K.”
Back then, it captured the differing fortunes between white-collar
professionals still employed and working at home while stock prices
rose, even as massive layoffs at factories, restaurants, and
entertainment venues pushed unemployment to nearly 15%.
Inequality persists
Inequality was somewhat reversed in the aftermath of the pandemic, when
businesses offered large raises for blue collar workers as the economy
reopened and demand surged. Many companies — restaurants, hotels,
entertainment venues — were caught short-staffed and sought to rapidly
increase hiring. Lower-income workers saw larger pay gains than
higher-paid ones.
In 2023 and 2024, inflation-adjusted wages for the bottom quarter of
workers rose at a yearly rate of 3.9%, outpacing the 3.1% gains for the
top quarter, according to research by the Federal Reserve Bank of
Minneapolis.
“We had that kind of two-year period where the bottom was catching up
and that talk of the K-shape went away,” Dario Perkins, an economist at
TSLombard, said. “And since then, the economy’s cooled down again,” he
added, bringing back K-shape references.
This year, however, inflation-adjusted wage growth has weakened as
hiring has fallen, with the drop more pronounced for lower-income
Americans. Their wage growth has plunged to an annual rate of just 1.5%,
the Minneapolis Fed found, below that of the highest earning quarter of
workers at 2.4%.

Slower income growth has left many lower-income workers less able to
spend. Based on data from its credit card and debit card customers, Bank
of America found that spending among higher-income households rose 2.7%
in October compared with a year ago, while lower-income groups lagged at
just 0.7%.
And a Federal Reserve Bank of Boston study in August found that consumer
spending in recent years has been driven by richer households, while
lower- and middle-income Americans have piled up more credit card debt
even as they've spent less.
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A Trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Aug. 1,
2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, file)
 Businesses take note
Corporate executives are paying attention and in some cases
explicitly adjusting their businesses to account for it. They are
seeking ways to sell more high-priced items to the wealthy while
also reducing package sizes and taking other steps to target
struggling consumers.
Henrique Braun, chief operating officer at
Coca-Cola, for example, said in late October that the company is
pursuing both “affordability” and “premiumization." It is generating
more of its earnings from higher-end products such as its Smartwater
and Fairlife filtered milk brands, while at the same time
introducing mini cans for those looking to spend less.
“We continue to see divergency in spending between the income
groups,” Braun said in a conference call with analysts last month.
“The pressure on middle and low-end income consumers is still
there.”
Sales of first- and business-class tickets have been fueling revenue
and profit for Delta Air Lines, its CEO Ed Bastian said in October,
while lower-end consumers have been “clearly struggling."
And Best Buy CEO Corie Barry on Tuesday said that the top 40% of all
U.S. consumers are driving two-thirds of all consumption.
The remaining 60% are focused on getting the best deals and are more
dependent on a healthy job market, she said.
“One of the things we’re watching closely is how does employment
continue to evolve for particularly that cohort of people who are
living more paycheck to paycheck,” she added.
AI plays a role
The massive investment in data centers and computing power has also
contributed to the K-shaped economy, by lifting share prices for the
so-called “Magnificent 7” companies competing to build out AI
Infrastructure. Yet so far it's not creating many jobs or lifting
incomes for those who don't own stocks.
“What we see at the very top is an economy that is sort of
self-contained ... between AI, the stock market, the experiences of
the wealthy,” Atwater said. “And it’s largely contained. It doesn’t
flow through to the bottom.”

Driven by big gains for companies like Google, Amazon, Nvidia, and
Microsoft, the stock market has risen nearly 15% this year. But the
wealthiest 10% of Americans own roughly 87% of the stock market,
according to Federal Reserve data. The poorest 50% own just 1.1%.
K-shape comes with concerns
Many economists worry that an economy propelled mostly by the
wealthiest isn't sustainable. Perkins notes that should layoffs
worsen and unemployment rise, middle- and lower-income Americans
could pull back sharply on spending. Revenue for companies like
Apple and Amazon would fall. Advertising revenue, which is fueling
companies such as Google and Facebook parent Meta, typically plunges
in downturns.
Such a cycle could even force the “Mag 7” to pull back on their AI
investments and send the economy into recession, he said.
“Then you're talking about the bottom of the K essentially pulling
down the top,” he added.
Perkins, however, sees a different path as more likely: Many U.S.
households will receive larger tax refunds early next year under the
Trump administration's budget law. And Trump will likely appoint a
new Federal Reserve chair by next May who will be more inclined to
cut interest rates. Lower borrowing costs could accelerate growth
and wages, though it could also worsen inflation.
___
AP Retail Writer Anne D'Innocenzio in New York contributed to this
report.
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