The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Numbers, nostalgia and our economic pessimism

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America is celebrated for its economic dynamism and ample and generously paid employment opportunit­ies. It’s a nation that attracts immigrants from around the world. Yet Americans are bummed, and have been for a while. They believe that life was better 40 years ago. And maybe it was on some fronts, but not economical­ly.

Surveys repeatedly demonstrat­e that Americans view today’s economy in a negative light. Some 76% believe the country is going in the wrong direction. Some polls even show that young people believe they’ll be denied the American dream. Now, that might turn out to be true if Congress continues spending like drunken sailors. But it certainly isn’t true based on a look back in time. By nearly all economic measures, we’re doing much better today than we were in the 1970s and 1980s — a time most nostalgic people revere as a great era.

In a recent article, economist Jeremy Horpedahl looked at generation­al wealth (all assets minus all debt) and how today’s young people are faring compared to previous generation­s. His findings are surprising. After all the talk about how Millennial­s are the poorest or unluckiest generation yet, Horpedahl’s data show them with dramatical­ly more wealth than Gen Xers had at the same age. And this wealth continues to grow.

What about income? A new paper by the American Enterprise Institute’s Kevin Corinth and Federal Reserve Board’s Jeff Larrimore looks at income levels by generation in a variety of ways. They find that each of the past four generation­s had higher inflation-adjusted incomes than did the previous generation. Further, they find that this trend doesn’t seem to

 ?? Columnist ?? Veronique de Rugy
Columnist Veronique de Rugy

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