By Andrea Shalal and Steve Holland WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Feeling the heat from Americans worried about inflation, U.S. President Donald Trump will meet on Monday with owners, operators and suppliers of fast-food chain McDonald’s to tout his administration’s efforts to drive down living costs. Trump, who promised during the 2024 election campaign to bring down costs, […]
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Trump to talk up economy in meeting with McDonald’s owners, operators
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By Andrea Shalal and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Feeling the heat from Americans worried about inflation, U.S. President Donald Trump will meet on Monday with owners, operators and suppliers of fast-food chain McDonald’s to tout his administration’s efforts to drive down living costs.
Trump, who promised during the 2024 election campaign to bring down costs, insists that his administration’s tax cuts and steps to re-shore domestic manufacturing will help boost Americans’ real income and spur growth. Still, he has conceded of late that it could take time for those measures to kick in.
Costs have continued to rise, not least because of sweeping tariffs Trump has imposed against nearly every country. Inflation worries fueled Democratic victories in state and local elections this month. Trump’s approval ratings have continued to languish amid Americans’ frustration over persistently high prices.
On Monday, Trump will appeal directly to the nation’s largest fast-food chain, whose CEO Chris Kempczinski this month warned that low-income consumers were having to absorb “some significant inflation.”
Trump, who made headlines when he served french fries at a Philadelphia-area McDonald’s during a campaign stop in 2024, is due to speak to the chain’s bipartisan “Impact Summit” in Washington on Monday evening.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore and New York Governor Kathy Hochul – both Democrats – are also due to speak, along with cabinet members and lawmakers, according to an internal memo sent to franchisees, seen by Reuters.
Trump, who has long argued that his tariffs are not fueling price increases, reversed course on Friday when he announced the elimination of duties on more than 200 imported food items, including coffee and bananas, later conceding to reporters that tariffs could raise costs “in some cases.”
Trump does not plan to unveil any new initiatives at the McDonald’s event, a senior administration official told Reuters. Instead he will focus on steps taken by his administration to boost Americans’ buying power including tax cuts, and moves to lower drug prices and re-shore domestic manufacturing.
He will also address efforts to help small businesses, the official said, without providing any details.
Trump has already floated the idea of a $2,000 tariff-funded check for lower- and middle-income Americans, although such a measure would require congressional approval. He also suggested 50-year mortgages as a way to make houses more affordable, although homeowners would pay more in interest.
TRUMP PLANS RALLIES FOCUSED ON ECONOMY IN COMING MONTHS
Trump plans to hold rallies around the United States in coming months in battleground states to tout his economic agenda, two administration officials said, ahead of midterm elections next November.
Trump insists that inflation is far lower now than during former Democratic President Joe Biden’s term, when consumer prices spiked up to around 9%. But Americans remain skeptical.
The Economist’s longtime “Big Mac” index, which measures the cost of the famous double-decker hamburger across numerous countries, shows that a Big Mac cost on average $6.01 as of July, up from $5.69 a year ago and $5.15 three years ago.
Meat costs have remained a sore point. A pound of ground chuck beef cost consumers about $6.33 in September, up 13.5% from a year earlier, according to U.S. government data.
The most commonly cited measure of U.S. inflation, the Consumer Price Index, was 3% higher year over year in September, its highest since January, with more than half of line items tracked showing gains that topped the 3% overall rate.
The annual cost increase overall for food consumed at home, while seemingly more modest at 2.7% in September, is the largest in more than two years.
Consumers remain frustrated with high prices, a fact corporate executives frequently noted during third-quarter earnings calls. They said lower- and middle-income earners were bearing the brunt of higher costs on food, rent and other costs.
Companies like Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola and Colgate-Palmolive all cited concerns about rising costs and a widening gap between low- and higher-income consumers.
McDonald’s, keenly aware of how resistant low-income earners are to higher prices, has been offering a $5 value meal for more than a year now.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal and Steve Holland; additional reporting by David Gaffen, Waylon Cunningham and Dan Burns in New York and Tom Polansek in Chicago; editing by Ross Colvin and Richard Chang)

