Close Menu
Beverly Hills Examiner

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Shakira Brings Her Biggest Hits To Free Rio de Janeiro Show

    May 3, 2026

    Markets on alert as Trump vows Project Freedom for Hormuz after renewed attacks on ships

    May 3, 2026

    Adam Schiff Has A Great Idea To Lower Gas Prices And Make Big Oil Pay

    May 3, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Beverly Hills Examiner
    • Home
    • US News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Science
    • Technology
    • Lifestyle
    • Music
    • Television
    • Film
    • Books
    • Contact
      • About
      • Amazon Disclaimer
      • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
      • Terms and Conditions
      • Privacy Policy
    Beverly Hills Examiner
    Home»Business»America got rich and got sad. A top economist says 2020 broke something that hasn’t healed
    Business

    America got rich and got sad. A top economist says 2020 broke something that hasn’t healed

    By AdminMay 3, 2026
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit Telegram
    America got rich and got sad. A top economist says 2020 broke something that hasn’t healed


    For the past several years, Peltzman has been combing through the General Social Survey, a random-sample poll that has asked Americans the same simple question since 1972: Are you happy? What he found about the years since the pandemic stopped him cold.

    “There was a huge hit,” he told me recently. “And then it’s only a little bit coming back. So when you’re all done, there’s an unprecedented decline into the whole of the 2020s.”

    Americans are now at their least happy point in the survey’s 50-year history. Peltzman’s measure — the percentage saying “very happy” minus the percentage saying “not very happy” — ran at roughly +20 points on average from 1972 through the last pre-pandemic survey in 2018. That baseline held through wars, recessions, assassinations, stagflation, and 9/11. None of it broke the floor in any sustained way.

    Then 2020 hit. The crash was 22.2 percentage points — by far the largest single move in the survey’s history. The number of people saying “not very happy” actually exceeded those saying “very happy” for the first time ever. The measure has come back somewhat since 2021 to around +6 as of 2024, resulting in a shift from +20 to single digits within just a few years, with no meaningful recovery.

    Peltzman calls this a “regime change.” In macroeconomics, that phrase means something beyond a shift in numbers — it’s a shift in the underlying mechanism generating the numbers. “It’s not just a change,” he told me. “The whole mechanism that’s generating the numbers is different.” Unless the next wave of data shows a return to the norm, he said, “you have to proceed on the assumption that the world is different.”

    The consequences are not abstract. Gallup estimates that low employee engagement costs the global economy $8.9 trillion in lost productivity annually, with unhappy workers generating higher absenteeism, turnover, and lower-quality output. The physical toll is equally severe: social isolation — the companion condition to chronic unhappiness — raises health risks as much as smoking 15 cigarettes a day and is twice as harmful as obesity, with the CDC linking it directly to heart disease, stroke, dementia, and earlier death.

    The wrong chart

    There is a debate that has defined this decade, and nobody is winning it. On one side: economists and analysts armed with charts showing wages up, unemployment low, household net worth at record highs. On the other: everyone else reports feeling squeezed, anxious, and quietly furious. The two sides are both right. They’re just reading different things.

    The framework that best addresses the gap is called the aspiration gap. Economists Andrew Clark and Andrew Oswald showed that what drives satisfaction isn’t your paycheck — it’s where you sit relative to where you could reasonably have expected to sit, given your age and education. Financial Times data journalist John Burn-Murdoch recently put the finding starkly: there is a stronger statistical link between job satisfaction and income than expected, relative to absolute terms.

    A raise doesn’t make you feel richer if everyone around you got a bigger one. And a college degree doesn’t make you feel successful if a college degree no longer marks you as exceptional.

    This second point is where the story turns generational. The mass expansion of higher education — well-intentioned, broadly beneficial — has produced a society in which each successive graduating class is more credentialed and less elite than the last. One in three graduates now falls in the bottom bracket of earnings relative to their reasonable expectations, even though only about 10% are in the lowest absolute earnings quartile. In the U.K., the average thirty-something university graduate today sits at the same income rank as the average high school graduate did in 1995. The ladder shifted down, and barely anyone noticed — because the absolute numbers kept going up.

    This is the scenario that retired UConn professor Peter Turchin calls “elite overpopulation”: a society so prosperous it makes education widely available, paradoxically producing a class of underemployed elites, with resentment — and sometimes revolution — ensuing. “The benefits that you get with wealth are now being diluted because there are just too many wealth holders,” Turchin told me last July. “There is overproduction of university degrees and the value of a university degree actually declines.”

    Picture the 28-year-old with a master’s degree and $80,000 in student loans, sharing a two-bedroom apartment in a second-tier city because the down payment on the starter home her parents bought at 26 would now require a decade of saving. She is not poor by any historical measure. She is, by the aspiration gap’s definition, exactly the kind of person the data predicts will be most dissatisfied — educated enough to know what she was promised, positioned just close enough to the dream to feel its absence every day.

    Wealth, meanwhile, has quietly redefined itself upward. According to Charles Schwab’s most recent Modern Wealth Survey, Americans now believe a net worth of $2.3 million is required to be considered wealthy — up 21% since 2021, far outpacing inflation. And the route that once led there has been foreclosed: median home prices have risen more than 400% since 1990, while median household income has risen less than 200%. The greatest returns now go to those who bought the assets decades ago.

    Who was hit hardest?

    When Peltzman looked at which Americans were hit hardest by the crash, he expected the usual suspects: the poor, the left behind, the least educated. That’s not what he found.

    “The biggest decline over this period is among the most educated,” he told me. “The ones with the largest concentration of people who have reached the dream — biggest decline. Smallest decline, the least educated.”

    Income told the same story. The wealthy fell furthest. The very poorest had the narrowest decline. The crash hit hardest precisely where expectations were highest — exactly what the aspiration gap would predict.

    And then there is the fairness question, which Peltzman described with genuine unease. For 50 years, the GSS asked Americans whether they thought other people would treat them fairly. For 50 years, the answers were positive. Then: “They’ve behaved exactly like the happiness question — fell off the end of a table in 2020 and has not come back.”

    Author Derek Thompson has a name for all of this: the Permademic. The argument that 2020 didn’t just cause a recession or a public health crisis — it caused a cultural rupture that released forces that have not been contained. Consumer prices surged 25% between 2020 and 2025, the same increase that had taken 13 years before. Confidence in every major institution — government, media, medicine, education — collapsed simultaneously. And counterintuitively, it was the richest third of households whose sentiment fell furthest, because full employment raised the cost of the services — childcare, restaurants, home care — that the affluent had come to treat as near-entitlements.

    The aspiration gap, in other words, is not just a story about young adults falling behind their parents. It is a story about a society that raised everyone’s expectations and then, all at once, made them feel permanently out of reach.

    Richard Edelman, whose eponymous firm has tracked global trust for more than two decades, didn’t push back when I shared the data. “A lot of people’s presumptions are shattered,” he said. “The presumption that I’m going to do better than my parents. The presumption that all facts from the CDC are true. The presumption that my doctor was infallible. These illusions have turned out to be illusions.”

    His colleague David Bersoff, head of research at the Edelman Trust Institute, traced the consequences: “That starts leading to some of the erosion of the social fabric. You get polarization, polarization leads to paralysis, paralysis leads to grievance, grievance leads to insularity.” The endpoint, he said, is “a very negative, mean-spirited way of interacting with the world.”

    Specifically, Bersoff added, as people’s concerns “fester unaddressed” — especially the ones that directly affect things they care deeply about, such as sense of personal safety, feelings of financial well-being and perceptions of being treated fairly — polarization sets in and with it comes paralysis. “This polarization/paralysis deepens people’s sense that the system is not working in general, and certainly not working for them.”

    Over time, polarization metastasizes into grievance which, if left unaddressed, leads to an insular mindset, defined as an unwillingness or hesitancy to trust people who are different than we are. Once we lose the willingness to trust and thus constructively engage with others across our belief, values, and background differences; progress, and the potential for progress, comes to a halt.

    As this sequence plays out, the social fabric further shreds and unravels; trust circles shrink and become ever more homogeneous; and hostility, mean spiritedness, and a general hardening take hold in society.

    And this is what we are seeing in many countries today.

    Harvard economist Raj Chetty’s research quantifies the damage to the dream’s foundation: more than 90% of children born in the 1940s grew up to earn more than their parents in absolute terms. For children born in 1980 — today’s 40-somethings — that figure has collapsed to roughly 50%. This aligns with the 2026 Trust Barometer finding that only 21% of U.S. respondents believe the next generation will be better off — down 9 points year-over-year.

    A segregated happiness society

    Peltzman’s most arresting finding — the one he described with the closest thing to alarm I heard in our conversation — is about marriage.

    His research established what he calls the “marital premium”: married people score roughly 31 points higher on his happiness scale than unmarried people, a gap that held remarkably stable for 50 years across gender, race, age, income, and education. The crash changed the geometry. The marital premium stayed roughly the same, perhaps even widening. But the floor for the unmarried collapsed.

    “We have a segregated happiness society,” Peltzman told me. “Here are the married people — they’re still reasonably okay, less than they used to be. Here are the unmarried, who used to be marginal. They’re way unhappy now.”

    The numbers: 45% of American adults 25 and older are unmarried. Before the crash, they averaged near break-even on his scale. Now they average -15. The married have fallen from +30 to +50 — but still comfortably positive. “I can’t see that persisting without consequences,” Peltzman said. “Political, social, you name it. It’s a sense of foreboding.”

    Marriage, in this reading, functions as the one social institution that still reliably closes the aspiration gap — a stable anchor for identity and status at a moment when career and credentials no longer deliver those things dependably. And it is, of course, in long-term decline. The institution that best buffers against the aspiration gap is the one Americans have been least likely to form — for reasons that are themselves rooted in economic anxiety: housing costs, childcare costs, the sense that you shouldn’t start a family until you’ve arrived somewhere. Somewhere that keeps receding.

    Meanwhile, the experience economy has emerged as a coping mechanism. Delta CEO Ed Bastian has watched it play out in how Americans spend, talking to me about it in Las Vegas at the For All Summit, put on by Great Place to Work. “People aren’t as interested in investing in or buying things for themselves,” he told me. “They’re more interested in investing in themselves.” Delta’s premium revenue has surpassed main cabin revenue for the first time — not because Americans are uniformly flush, but because experiences have become, for a meaningful slice of the country, a substitute for the status markers that used to come from career and credentials.

    What needs to change

    Peltzman doesn’t offer a fix. “We’ve got to start thinking about how to fix it,” he told me. “That’s my only purpose. I’m too old to start another career.” But he offers the clearest statement of what needs to happen first: acknowledgment that something real has broken, and that the charts showing the line going up are not lying, but they are not telling the whole truth either.

    The people who run the institutions Americans inhabit day-to-day have their own answers. Edelman’s is relational: listen, go local, build trust one conversation at a time. Bastian’s is financial dignity — his $100 million bet that giving a Delta employee a $1,000 emergency fund changes not just their financial security but their sense of self. Hoplamazian’s is emotional connectivity: “We don’t live in a transactional world.”

    These are, at root, the same answer. The aspiration gap doesn’t close from the top down. It closes, if it closes at all, from the inside out — through institutions, relationships, and communities that make people feel like their position in the world is real, respected, and connected to something beyond a chart.

    Gallup finds that Americans are now nearly evenly split on whether the American Dream is fundamentally about opportunity — the ability to improve your life through education and better work — or stability, merely being able to hold a family together with a job and a safe place to live. Lower-income Americans now predominantly define the dream as stability. Only the already-affluent still define it as an opportunity. That is the aspiration gap made visible in survey form: the goalposts have moved not because people became lazier or less ambitious, but because a generation has quietly recalibrated downward.

    The GSS is in the field right now and Peltzman is watching for the next set of numbers. “Unless the next set of numbers comes in with a return to the norm,” he told me, “the world is different.”





    Original Source Link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit Telegram
    Previous ArticlePete Hegseth Was A Complete Train Wreck At Iran War Hearing
    Next Article ARIA Hall of Fame 2026 Inductees Revealed Amid 40th Anniversary

    RELATED POSTS

    Markets on alert as Trump vows Project Freedom for Hormuz after renewed attacks on ships

    May 3, 2026

    Iran juggles oil cuts and storage strain to resist U.S. blockade

    May 2, 2026

    Trump picked a fight with the Pope: The one person he can’t fire, can’t outbid, and can’t outlast

    May 2, 2026

    Trump says a ‘final proposal’ for a taxpayer-funded takeover of Spirit Airlines is under review

    May 1, 2026

    ‘Cut up the credit cards:’ Members of Congress call for action after US debt surpasses GDP

    May 1, 2026

    Meta’s threat to quit New Mexico ‘is showing the world how little it cares about child safety,’ AG says

    April 30, 2026
    latest posts

    Shakira Brings Her Biggest Hits To Free Rio de Janeiro Show

    Shakira performed a massive free show in Brazil last night at Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana…

    Markets on alert as Trump vows Project Freedom for Hormuz after renewed attacks on ships

    May 3, 2026

    Adam Schiff Has A Great Idea To Lower Gas Prices And Make Big Oil Pay

    May 3, 2026

    Did the Biden administration purposefully ignore COVID vaccine side effects?

    May 3, 2026

    Asus Zenbook A16 (2026) Review: Savor the Power, Ignore the Beige

    May 3, 2026

    This Treatment Could Reverse Osteoarthritis Joint Damage With a Single Injection

    May 3, 2026

    Is Star Wars Finally Revealing The Origins Of The Mandalorian’s Most Mysterious Character?

    May 3, 2026
    Categories
    • Books (1,218)
    • Business (6,124)
    • Cover Story (4)
    • Film (6,062)
    • Lifestyle (4,147)
    • Music (6,132)
    • Politics (6,124)
    • Science (5,473)
    • Technology (6,058)
    • Television (5,751)
    • Uncategorized (3)
    • US News (6,109)
    popular posts

    WATCH: Pro-Trump Strategist Reads Russia Collusion Hoaxer Adam Schiff the Riot Act at Airport and the Look on Schiff’s Face Afterward is Priceless | The Gateway Pundit

    Credit: @alexbruesewitz Pro-Trump strategist Alex Bruesewitz received a golden opportunity Monday that conservatives nationwide would…

    15 Best Casual Pants For Men For Any Situation in 2023

    April 22, 2023

    Anne Heche Seriously Injured After Crashing Car into Los Angeles Home

    August 5, 2022

    Joe Black Announces Launch Of New Podcast

    July 13, 2022
    Archives
    Browse By Category
    • Books (1,218)
    • Business (6,124)
    • Cover Story (4)
    • Film (6,062)
    • Lifestyle (4,147)
    • Music (6,132)
    • Politics (6,124)
    • Science (5,473)
    • Technology (6,058)
    • Television (5,751)
    • Uncategorized (3)
    • US News (6,109)
    About Us

    We are a creativity led international team with a digital soul. Our work is a custom built by the storytellers and strategists with a flair for exploiting the latest advancements in media and technology.

    Most of all, we stand behind our ideas and believe in creativity as the most powerful force in business.

    What makes us Different

    We care. We collaborate. We do great work. And we do it with a smile, because we’re pretty damn excited to do what we do. If you would like details on what else we can do visit out Contact page.

    Our Picks

    This Treatment Could Reverse Osteoarthritis Joint Damage With a Single Injection

    May 3, 2026

    Is Star Wars Finally Revealing The Origins Of The Mandalorian’s Most Mysterious Character?

    May 3, 2026

    ‘RHOBH’ Amanda Frances Confirms Exit After One Season?

    May 3, 2026
    © 2026 Beverly Hills Examiner. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit "Cookie Settings" to provide a controlled consent.
    Cookie SettingsAccept All
    Manage consent

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
    CookieDurationDescription
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
    viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
    Functional
    Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
    Performance
    Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
    Analytics
    Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
    Advertisement
    Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
    Others
    Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
    SAVE & ACCEPT