What causes Americans to feel downcast despite their thriving economy?

What causes Americans to feel downcast despite their thriving economy?

Why are ⁤Americans so gloomy about their great economy?

“The vibes are off” is a phrase that does not usually appear in rigorous⁢ economic analysis but has cropped⁣ up again and ‍again in serious discussions about America over the past⁤ year. ⁤From an array of hard data, there is reason to think that people ought to be quite satisfied about the state of the economy: inflation has slowed sharply, petrol ⁣prices are down, jobs are plentiful, incomes are rising and the stockmarket is strong. But survey after‍ survey suggests that Americans ⁣are in fact quite unhappy. They⁤ think ⁢that the economy is ⁢in bad​ shape and that President Joe Biden is mismanaging it. What gives?

Start with the evidence of gloom. The figure watched most closely by economists for ​an idea of what people are ‌feeling ‍is a consumer-sentiment index from ‌the University⁤ of Michigan. For the past two years it has bounced around at levels last seen during the global financial crisis of⁤ 2007-09. Even with an​ improvement in December, it is still ‌30% below ‍its recent peak on the eve of⁤ the covid-19 crisis ‌in⁣ early 2020.

Many other surveys are equally downcast. Every⁣ week since 2009 The Economist/YouGov poll⁣ has asked some 1,500 Americans to assess the economy: nearly half now think it is getting worse, up from about one-third in the decade before covid. Questions focused on Mr Biden’s‍ record yield even less⁤ enthusiasm:⁤ two-thirds of respondents to a ​Gallup‌ poll in November disapproved of his handling of the economy. And all this despite‍ America outgrowing its large, developed peers ‌over the past‍ few years.

2024-01-14 14:06:48
Original from www.economist.com

Exit mobile version