A recent University of Houston survey reveals that nearly 80% of Houstonians are concerned that wages are not keeping pace with the cost of living, making it one of the city’s top economic issues.
The survey, conducted by the UH Hobby School of Public Affairs, collected responses from residents of Houston and Chicago to compare economic perceptions in two of the nation’s largest cities. In Houston, 78% of respondents listed wages lagging behind expenses among their top three concerns, with 33% naming it their greatest economic challenge. Other prominent concerns included high living costs, inequality and wealth disparity, job availability, and education and skill gaps.
Maria P. Perez Arguelles, lead author of the report, said affordability emerged as a central issue in both cities, noting that Houstonians are particularly worried about wages, while Chicagoans focus on the high cost of living. Median household income in Houston is $62,894 compared to $75,134 in Chicago, with Houston’s cost of living about 6% below the national average versus 5% above for Chicago.
The survey also highlighted demographic differences. Among Houston residents, Hispanic respondents were most likely to say wages are not keeping up with expenses (40%), followed by Black residents (31%), and White residents (22%).
The study further explored residents’ perceptions of local, state, and national government direction. More than half of Houstonians felt the country, state, and city were headed in the wrong direction, with dissatisfaction highest at the national level (80%) and lowest at the city level (58%). Political affiliation strongly influenced these perceptions. Only 7% of Houston Democrats thought the country was moving in the right direction, versus 63% of Republicans. Democrats were more optimistic about the city (37%), while Republican approval was high across all levels, including 66% for Houston itself.
Perez Arguelles noted that these partisan differences mirrored trends seen in Chicago, though Chicagoans generally expressed more favorable views of their city and state compared with Houstonians.
The survey sampled 1,500 Houstonians with a margin of error of ±3.47%, and more than 1,200 Chicago residents.
The findings underscore the ongoing economic pressures facing Houstonians, particularly regarding wage growth, cost of living, and perceptions of government effectiveness.