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-- Shares Facebook Twitter Reddit Email Meghan McCain dove into the economy and the cost of groceries during an interview with the New York Post financial correspondent Lydia Moynihan on Wednesday's episode of her "Citizen McCain" podcast. Moynihan highlighted growing concerns around the U.S.

economy, specifically the increase in price for goods like groceries, loans and how difficult it has become to pay off debt like credit cards or even pay off your car. "I feel like we're at this point in the economy where people are told they can't trust themselves. .



. Economists are criticizing the fact that people don't feel good about the economy but economists are saying no it's so much better, you should feel good," Moynihan told McCain. Related "Women like that get passes": Meghan McCain says she faces cruelty unlike "people like AOC" She continued: "And I hate that because why should someone in Washington D.

C. lecture somebody who is living their reality wherever they are and they know they have less money at the end of the month when they buy groceries." Moynihan noted that the Federal Reserve is trying to tighten the economy by raising interest rates to slash inflation which is why the American public has seen a difference in their cost of living.

"So many people in my generation feel like they're never going to have the American Dream," Moynihan said. "I feel like there's all of these tropes that we hear 'don't avocado toast' and there are exogenous factors that are actually m.

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