Trump Addresses Inflation Concerns

Spread the news!

Trump Addresses Inflation Concerns in Meeting with McDonaldโ€™s Franchisees

Washington, Nov. 17, 2025 โ€“ Under intensifying pressure from U.S. consumers frustrated with persistently high prices, President Donald Trump met with McDonaldโ€™s franchise owners, operators and suppliers in Washington on Monday. The president assured attendees that his administration is โ€œmaking tremendous progressโ€ in combating inflation, while acknowledging that more work is needed.

The remarks came amid declining approval ratings and recent Democratic gains in state and local elections fueled by economic anxieties โ€” particularly frustration over the rising cost of food and daily necessities.


๐Ÿ”ต 1 | Trumpโ€™s Inflation Message: Progress Claimed, No New Policy Details

Trump told the group that he is โ€œfighting every day to support small businesses,โ€ reiterating his promise from the 2024 campaign to lower household costs and restore purchasing power.

Key statements:

  • Trump repeated claims that tax cuts and reshoring U.S. manufacturing will lift real incomes.
  • He admitted that these effects โ€œtake timeโ€ to be felt.
  • No new inflation-related policy measures were announced.

Instead, Trump mixed policy talking points with off-topic remarks, including:

  • Military actions against Iranian nuclear facilities
  • His personal affinity for McDonaldโ€™s food
  • His renaming of the Gulf of Mexico

Several claims concerning the U.S. economic performance were false or misleading, according to fact-checkers.


๐Ÿ”ต 2 | Tariff Policy Under Scrutiny: Trump Shifts Position

For years Trump insisted his tariffs did not cause higher prices.
On Friday, however, he reversed course, admitting tariffs could raise costs โ€œin some cases.โ€

New developments:

  • Trump announced the removal of tariffs on over 200 imported food items, including coffee and bananas.
  • He floated the idea of a $2,000 tariff-funded relief check for low- and middle-income Americans (requires congressional approval).
  • He suggested 50-year mortgages to make homes more affordable โ€” but those would result in higher lifetime interest payments.

This unusual policy pivot highlights mounting political pressure as consumers continue to feel squeezed.


๐Ÿ”ต 3 | Consumers Still Struggling With High Prices

The economic data paints a challenging picture for households:

Inflation data:

  • CPI (Sept): 3% YoY โ€” the highest since January.
  • Over half of CPI categories rose more than 3%.
  • Food at home: +2.7% YoY, the largest increase in over two years.
  • Big Mac Index: $6.01 (July) โ†’ up from $5.69 last year and $5.15 three years ago.
  • Ground beef: $6.33/lb โ†’ +13.5% YoY.

Consumer sentiment:

  • Americans remain skeptical of Trump’s claims despite his insistence that inflation is lower than under Biden.
  • Third-quarter earnings calls show widespread concern among CEOs regarding:
    • weakened household budgets
    • sharp income divides
    • reduced discretionary spending

Companies such as Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, and Colgate-Palmolive repeatedly highlighted the strain on low-income consumers.


๐Ÿ”ต 4 | McDonaldโ€™s Focuses on Value as Low-Income Consumers Feel Pain

McDonaldโ€™s CEO Chris Kempczinski recently warned that lower-income consumers are facing โ€œsignificant inflation.โ€

To preserve affordability, the chain has:

  • maintained a $5 value meal for more than a year
  • increased promotional activity
  • held key menu items stable in pricing

Given the strong price sensitivity of fast-food customers, McDonaldโ€™s is positioning itself aggressively toward value-oriented offerings.


๐Ÿ”ต 5 | Politics: Trump Enters Economic Campaign Mode

Two senior administration officials confirmed that Trump plans a series of economy-focused rallies in swing states ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

His goals:

  • reframe the inflation narrative in his favor
  • reassure key voting blocs
  • contrast his policies with Democratic positions
  • mobilize grassroots support

Although inflation is indeed lower than the 2022 peak of ~9%, prices remain permanently elevated relative to pre-pandemic levels โ€” a major challenge for political messaging.


๐Ÿ”ต 6 | CMB Market Interpretation

Fast-Food & QSR Sector

  • Value meals are crucial to retaining core customers.
  • Discounting will intensify through 2026.
  • Beef and key inputs remain cost drivers.

Consumer Goods Sector

  • Strong โ€œtrade-downโ€ trend:
    • private label over brands
    • fewer discretionary food purchases
  • Premium FMCG categories face volume pressure.

Political Risk

  • Trumpโ€™s shifting tariff stance increases policy unpredictability.
  • Removal of food tariffs may modestly ease retail prices.
  • Tariff-funded checks remain unlikely.

Corporate Strategy

  • Multinationals prepare for:
    • weaker real incomes
    • heightened discounting
    • lower brand loyalty

๐Ÿ”ต 7 | Outlook

Short-term (1โ€“3 months):

  • Commodity pressures (especially beef) remain high.
  • Value-oriented offers in fast-food will expand.
  • Inflation rhetoric will dominate political messaging.

Medium-term (3โ€“12 months):

  • U.S. economy likely in โ€œlow inflation, high pricesโ€ mode.
  • Consumers will remain cautious with discretionary spending.
  • Trumpโ€™s economic agenda will focus on manufacturing and tariffs.

Source: Reuters