Posted on Friday, July 25, 2025
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by W. J. Lee
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Six months into his second term, President Donald Trump is delivering on his promise to create another middle-class economic boom that is even bigger than the one seen during his first term. A new Treasury Department report reveals that middle-class and blue-collar workers are experiencing real-wage gains not seen in nearly 60 years – and it’s no accident.
According to the Treasury’s June dispatch, average hourly earnings for middle-class workers rose 1.7 percent from December 2024 to May 2025, outpacing the consumer price index inflation of 0.9 percent over the same period.
That might sound like a slight gain, but it translates to the most impressive half-year real-wage gain at the outset of a presidency since Richard Nixon’s 0.8 percent increase almost six decades ago. The only other time it came close to that? Eight years ago, during Trump’s first term.
It’s also a stark turnaround from the Biden administration, when real wages declined by about 2.5 percent in the first six months. Overall during Biden’s presidency, real wages inched up by a meager 0.7 percent. During Trump’s first term, real wages exploded by about 8.4 percent pre-pandemic. That figure was even better for blue-collar workers, topping 9.6 percent.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent rightly credits Trump for this apparent turnaround and return to the successes of his first administration. Just as he promised on the campaign trail last year, Trump has refused to stand by while everyday Americans watch inflation and stagnant wage growth erode their paychecks. Instead, through policies geared toward bringing down inflation and keeping nominal wages rising, Trump has delivered meaningful results for American workers.
More than just a headline, this development represents thousands of dollars a year for working Americans. It means that more families can afford to take a vacation, go out to eat, buy a new car, or invest in their dream home – resulting in more economic activity that creates a self-propelling loop of growth and investment.
This wage surge didn’t happen by chance. It followed Trump’s bold, unapologetic campaign against inflation. Defying “expert” predictions that the President’s tariffs would send prices soaring again, inflation quickly fell after Trump took office and has remained near four-year lows. Six months in, it appears Trump has defeated Biden’s inflation monster, fulfilling the core economic promise of his 2024 campaign.
Treasury counselor Joseph Lavorgna noted that real wage growth is riding the wave of Trump’s inflation stabilization: “nominal wages up, inflation down” – a simple formula that clearly works. At a time when global turmoil and supply-chain shocks were expected to increase the cost of many goods, U.S. consumers this year have seen precisely the opposite.
The good economic news for middle-class families and blue-collar workers doesn’t stop with their paychecks, either. Summer gas prices, which play a key role in household budgets, have remained remarkably low, easing the pressure on commuters. Under the Trump administration’s embrace of American energy and deregulation, domestic output has soared and prices at the pump have remained cheap.
Tax relief is the final piece of the puzzle. The recently passed “One Big, Beautiful Bill” (OBBB) extends many provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, with additional measures targeting middle- and lower-income families. According to IRS data, taxpayers who earned less than $100,000 received by far the biggest benefit from the 2017 law. That means the biggest winners from the OBBB will be those same middle- and working-class earners.
The OBBB also adds deductions for tips and overtime pay and includes a new deduction for middle-class seniors. That means the middle-class families who have already seen real progress since Trump took office are about to see even more.
Some critics – many of the same voices who wrongly predicted Trump’s tariffs would lead to inflation – have called this an economic sugar high that will surely lead to financial turmoil in the long run. But this analysis completely misses the point.
Trump understands the economic power of consumer optimism and the belief among middle- and working-class Americans that their financial situation will improve. Case in point: following the passage of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the IRS actually collected more money because Americans were making so much more, even as the percentage of their incomes they paid to the government was lower.
Whether wages rise faster or prices fall, the bottom line is the same – working families are finally getting ahead, and it’s a direct result of Trump’s policies. All of Trump’s actions complement each other to produce real results in paychecks and household budgets.
Ultimately, this is good news for Republicans as well. Voters aren’t moved by abstract GDP numbers, but by whether their dollars stretch farther. At 1.7 percent real-wage growth over half a year, Americans just effectively got a raise without increased work.
Yes, challenges remain. Global uncertainty and Washington’s spending instincts could threaten this progress. But the Trump White House has demonstrated that principled conservatism, not endless central bank easing or Keynesian-style government spending, can move the needle and ignite an economic boom.
W.J. Lee has served in the White House, NASA, on multiple political campaigns, and in nearly all levels of government. In his free time, he enjoys the “three R’s” – reading, running, and writing.
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