Affordability for the few, insecurity for the many
The 47th president
Teens working in the kitchen of a fast food operation
Child labor
19 states will increase their minimum wages on January 1
Minimum wage
ACA tax credits

In the first year of his second term, President Trump has actively made life less affordable for working people. We examine 47 of the most significant actions Trump has taken that make it harder for working families to afford the cost of living across

  1. Eroding workers’ wages and economic security;
  2. Undermining job creation;
  3. Weakening workers’ rights;
  4. Enabling employer exploitation; and
  5. Creating an ineffective government.

These highlight a subset of Trump’s actions with clear impacts on working people’s economic security and ability to afford a basic quality of life. Read more →

 

 

In recent years, child labor violations have been on the rise across the country.

At the same time, lawmakers in many states have proposed bills to reverse long-standing state child labor standards that prohibit employers from exposing youth under 18 to hazardous jobs or overly long work hours that interfere with their health and well-being.

Youth work permits—a repeated target of this coordinated, industry-backed campaign to weaken child labor laws—are effective in curbing violations. Here’s how →

Starting January 1, 19 states will increase their minimum wage floor. This will boost earnings for more than 8.3 million workers, with an additional $5 billion in pay due to the increases.

As concerns about rising prices and affordability dominate the news cycle, it is critical to recognize that “affordability” is a function of both prices and wages. And while prices are in most cases unlikely to decline significantly, policymakers can make decisions that boost wages for workers. Read more →

If Congress allows the enhanced Affordable Care Act (ACA) premium tax credits to expire, millions of working families will lose health care coverage and millions more will face sharply higher premiums.

A deeper story emerges when looking at who loses the most. New analysis finds that Black Americans in some of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas would face deep coverage losses and financial harm if credits expire.

It doesn’t have to be this way →

EPI in the news

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  • American Prospect | January 15, 2026
  • CNBC | January 15, 2026
  • Marketplace | January 15, 2026
  • Governing Magazine | January 15, 2026

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