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$60 Legos are my breaking point

Welcome to our new weekly roundup!

$60 Legos are my breaking point
These Legos are out of my price range, but some very generous grandparents *might* have bought them for Freddy’s birthday.
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Hi and welcome to our new weekly news roundup! I’ve been wanting to have some sort of link roundup/economic news update ever since I launched The Purse, and now that Alicia Adamczyk is joining as senior editor, I have someone to help me pull it off each week! Alicia and I will be trading back and forth on writing the intro essay, and we’ll both be contributing to the links roundup. This is an evolving project, so you might see it change a lot over the next few months. We welcome constructive feedback!

I’ve been reluctant to write about tariffs for a few reasons. One, it feels like the news around them is always changing. (Just last week, a court ruled they are illegal. Now the issue might be fast-tracked to the Supreme Court.) Two, they are so complicated! Plus, there are many beat journalists doing a great job covering this topic.

I also haven’t had firsthand experience with tariffs impacting my own spending—until last week. My son is a big fan of Star Wars Legos, specifically the mini figs1, and in mid-August, my mom bought him a “battle” pack at Walmart for $30. Fast-forward just one week, and I was shopping with my family at an outdoor mall on Cape Cod. We walked into a cute family-owned toy store in the shopping center, and they were selling a new package of Star Wars Legos we hadn’t seen before. This box—which had a similar number of Lego pieces to the box we just purchased at Walmart—was selling for $60!

“We had to increase the price of our Legos to keep up with tariffs,” the clerk explained. I was curious if the price was as high at Walmart, and while the big-box retailer isn’t charging $60, the same Star Wars “battle” pack is $44.97.

Seeing the price rise on Legos by 50% to 100% makes my eyes water. And frankly, it puts these toys just outside my budget. Legos were already a pricier toy (compared to, say, Hot Wheels, Freddy’s first love). Still, I might be inclined to buy a $30 toy on a whim. But $45—not so much. And $60? You can forget it. Which makes me feel really bad for the cute family-run toy store. (Not so bad for Freddy; he has plenty of mini figs IMO!)

When I was working on the Bank of Mom and Dad, the Yahoo/YouGov survey we ran found that 54% of parents were worried about how tariffs were going to impact back-to-school shopping prices. But the families I interviewed didn’t mention tariffs being an issue when it actually came time to shop. I imagine that’s because many retailers are still selling backstock and perhaps keeping prices low, since back-to-school season is the second-biggest shopping event of the year.

In mid-July, CNN reported that there are many reasons why it might be a while before we see prices rise because of tariffs. Still, Goldman Sachs economists wrote in a recent report that they believe it’s American consumers who will eventually bear the burden of related price hikes. (The Trump administration didn’t like this assessment and told Goldman to fire its chief economist.)

No surprise: All this uncertainty is making people feel uneasy. The Wall Street Journal reported last week that consumer sentiment dropped 6% in August, with the middle class “playing an outsize role in that waning optimism.”

“Several CEOs across the dining, retail, fashion, and airline industries have said their middle-class customers are increasingly strapped, even as high earners keep on buying,” the article read.

This doesn’t surprise me at all. Many families featured in Home Economics budget down to the last dollar. They don’t have wiggle room for more price hikes. And while many personal finance experts recommend finding ways to earn more rather than looking for areas where you can cut your spending, that’s more challenging, as the job market looks bad. The buzzy new corporate phrase making the rounds is “job-hugging”—the idea that workers are holding on tight to their current jobs even if they aren’t happy. Does this mean the heyday of job-hopping is over?

All of it just has me feeling a sort of low-key sense of dread. We know things are likely to get bad, but when? It feels impossible to plan when everything is up in the air. I’ll add that Kathryn Anne Edwards’ piece on the confusing state of the U.S. economy is very informative for anyone looking for an even deeper dive.

How are you feeling about tariffs and the economy in general? Do you have a number in mind that’s your breaking point for nonessential purchases?

-Lindsey

Tariffs in the news

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Other things we love

  • This conversation between Amy Poehler and Aubrey Plaza for Poehler’s podcast, Good Hang, had me in my feelings. Their show Parks and Recreation feels very much of a different era but I always love these two together. - Alicia
  • In The Atlantic, Jordan Michaelman asks, “What’s the point of a high school reunion?” I went to my 20th, and the highlight was getting a hotel room with my high school best friend and staying up all night talking and laughing. I say go to your reunion if you’ve got a friend going with you. - Lindsey
  • This story on facelifts in The Cut is a lot, but also, it’s hard to look away. And the price tag—$45,000 for a deep-plane facelift—is eye-popping! - Lindsey
  • There’s been a lot of discourse recently about the author Elizabeth Gilbert thanks to her controversial new memoir, but I appreciated this profile of Gilbert by Jia Tolentino in The New Yorker. - Alicia

The best money we spent this week

  • I paid $109 for a new filing cabinet for my home office, and everything already looks so much more organized. - Alicia
  • I’m obsessed with the little coffee shop in my neighborhood, and I popped in this week to grab an Americano and chat with the owner. It was $4.90 for the coffee (included a tip), but it feels like money well spent supporting a local business. Also, the coffee is delicious. - Lindsey

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