Time to start singing "Turn off the lights the parties over", for Sleepy Joe.
Just 14 percent of voters think his policies have made them better off, according to the survey published Monday.
And overall almost 70 per cent said Biden's economic policies had either hurt the US economy or had no impact, including 33 per cent who said they believed the president's policies had 'hurt the economy a lot.'
The results come after a series of polls show the president losing to former President Donald Trump, his likely Republican challenger, in the key battlegrounds that could decide the 2024 election.
For its part, the Biden campaign points out the only thing that matters is what voters do at the polling booth and that Democrats scored a slew of victories in elections last week.
'When Donald Trump looks at America, he sees a failing nation,' Biden said during a campaign stop in Chicago on Thursday. 'When I look at America, I see the strongest economy in the world ... leading the world again, the ability to set the world standards.'
A new monthly poll conducted for the Financial Times and the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business suggests most voters are closer to Trump than Biden in their analysis.
'Every group — Democrats, Republicans and independents — list rising prices as by far the biggest economic threat . . . and the biggest source of financial stress,' said Erik Gordon, a professor at Michigan's Ross School.
'That is bad news for Biden, and the more so considering how little he can do to reverse the perception of prices before election day.'
Just 14 percent of voters think his policies have made them better off, according to the survey published Monday.
And overall almost 70 per cent said Biden's economic policies had either hurt the US economy or had no impact, including 33 per cent who said they believed the president's policies had 'hurt the economy a lot.'
The results come after a series of polls show the president losing to former President Donald Trump, his likely Republican challenger, in the key battlegrounds that could decide the 2024 election.
For its part, the Biden campaign points out the only thing that matters is what voters do at the polling booth and that Democrats scored a slew of victories in elections last week.
'When Donald Trump looks at America, he sees a failing nation,' Biden said during a campaign stop in Chicago on Thursday. 'When I look at America, I see the strongest economy in the world ... leading the world again, the ability to set the world standards.'
A new monthly poll conducted for the Financial Times and the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business suggests most voters are closer to Trump than Biden in their analysis.
'Every group — Democrats, Republicans and independents — list rising prices as by far the biggest economic threat . . . and the biggest source of financial stress,' said Erik Gordon, a professor at Michigan's Ross School.
'That is bad news for Biden, and the more so considering how little he can do to reverse the perception of prices before election day.'