Nostalgia and anxiety are in
full bloom. Trumpian rhetorical authenticism
about “making this country great again” falsely implies that the US is now no
longer great. More Americans are hoping to turn the clock back and return to
the “good old days” when life (perhaps through rose-tinted VR goggles) seemed less anxious
and disordered and more culturally assured. Ah, the glories of the past. I
examine here how golden the good old days really were compared to the present
days.
Extensive public nostalgia
for the past is hardly new, it’s always lurking during unsettling times; and frankly
what times aren’t in some way unsettling? Desires of status-quo-ism or wishes to
have the past recreated once again can characterize folks who believe they’re
now forgotten and ignored. The underpinning of such people’s yearnings can be
their inability to construct a viable present and future for themselves and
families. History is replete with such yearnings.
From a previous age when the
good much-older days were also being proclaimed and preferred, an insightful Voltaire
wrote in 1764, “There are things in which the moderns are superior to the
ancients; and others, though very few, in which we are their inferiors. The
whole of the dispute reduces itself to this fact.”
Populist and nationalist proselytizers
like Donald Trump, Marine le Pen and other xenophobic complainers have had to
be quite selective in describing the allegedly far better golden ages or more
simply be dismissive of historic facts altogether. Ultimately, The Donald’s entreaties
hardly have anything to do with how well the nation is actually doing now or
was doing in the past. Instead, his calls rely on powerful emotions like
anxiety, fear and insecurity for their clout not facts.
Some members from the millennial
generation have succumbed to big anxieties about their prospects. In a story
headlined “Debt. Terror. Politics. To Seattle Millennials the Future Looks Scary,“
Kirk Johnson interviewed six Millennials who seem exceedingly anxious about
their futures despite being enrolled in the Ada Developers Academy. This Seattle
school trains women to code. Tuition is free those who passed an arduous admissions
process with all costs underwritten by local tech giants. From this
micro-sample of six seemingly fortunate people Johnson proceeds to characterize
Millennials as having acute anxieties about incurring debt, choosing a career and
other facets of modern adult life. And these six women are in a program whose
graduates find jobs with starting-salaries can reach $90,000. No
wonder Xanax prescriptions have grown over 27% since the Great Recession
officially ended.
Although I can relate from
afar to these six women’s current situation, I do remember many moons ago – in
the tumultuous 1960s and 1970s – when I was choosing a career and finding a
place for myself in a fast-changing, calamitous society. So I sympathize with
their plight as members of an emerging generation. I remember being in it
decades ago. But it’s difficult for me to understand how these six people can
be so plagued by doubt and anxiety, given their talents and likely prospects.
Johnson’s article anticipates
my difficulty when it states “people now in their 20s and 30s say that the
1960s were different, that there seemed to be a clearer goal then — to end
racial segregation, poverty or the war. The economy seemed better and the
nation’s future more assured.” Here these Millennials are engaged in the same
fantasy that the “this country can be great again” proselytizer and his cohorts
also suffer from, that the past was “golden” and far better than what we’re
suffering through now. The mists of history somehow make the past clearly
better than now.
To be trite, how would these
unidentified Millennials know how assured the Boomers’ future was 40+ years ago?
I’d have to say living amid the social, economic, political and cultural
transformations surrounding the Vietnam War debacle (e.g., Kent State), the civil
rights struggles (e.g., Selma and beyond), the John and Robert Kennedy
assassinations, Watergate’s consequent presidential resignation (Richard “I’m
not a crook” Nixon) and economic stagflation (with 12% annual inflation, 7.7%
unemployment and 13% interest rates) makes Millennials’ illusions about the 1960s’
and 1970s’ “assured future” ring hollow. It was by no means assured. As every
generation solemnly and candidly states, “You had to be there.”
The Millennials’ future is
iffy, just like all emerging
generations. But, paraphrasing Van Morrison, don’t let the future keep you out
of the present time. This apt notion seems especially worth remembering for apprehensive
Millennials. Hopefully their fresh talents, thoughts and technologies will
counter youthful anxieties that darkly cloud the expected sunshine ahead of
them as Millennials secure opportunities they can take advantage of.
So, were the olden days
golden and greater than now? Let’s see.
The Olympics.
Speaking of golden, the 2016 Summer
Olympics recently concluded in Rio de Janeiro. The instant experts have decided the
Rio Games were reasonably well run, quite entertaining and cool. After all,
it’s actually winter in Rio – makings these games the second “summer” Olympics
that actually happened in the host city’s winter. The 2000 Sydney games were
the first summer-games held in local winter. Despite the quadrennial pre-event
predictions of impending disaster, nothing terrible happened at the Rio Games;
unless you were an inebriated Ryan Lochte. Nevertheless, Rio and Brazil
probably lost at least a silver medal’s worth of money (that they can ill
afford) by hosting the Olympics, just like virtually all hosts always do. Go
figure.
But let’s get back to the US
athletes’ performance in 2016 compared to the Olympics’ “good old days.” I examined
the US performance in 4 past Olympics along with the 2016 games. The table
below presents the results of my analysis.
The total number of medals
awarded in the Summer Olympics more than doubled – to an astounding 975 medals
in 2016 – during the 46 years of Olympics shown in this table. In the Rio Games
11,303 athletes competed from 207 nations and territories in 28 different
sports. These sports included archery, BMX bicycling, rhythmic gymnastics, taekwondo
and wrestling. The US ranked first (receiving the most total medals) in
2016 and 2000. In 1972, 1964 and 1960 our overall medal performance was ranked
second behind the Soviet Union, even though our relative medal performance
(percent of total medals) in Tokyo was higher, as shown in the table.
Table 1: US Summer
Olympic Performance: 1960 to 2016
US Medal Performance
|
2016
Rio Games
|
2000
Sydney Games
|
1972
Munich Games
|
1964
Tokyo Games
|
1960
Rome Games
|
Total Medals Awarded
|
975
|
927
|
600
|
504
|
461
|
US Total Medal Rank
|
1st
|
1st
|
2nd
|
2nd
|
2nd
|
US Medals - % of Total
|
12.4%
|
10.0%
|
15.7%
|
17.9%
|
15.4%
|
US Gold
- % of Gold Total
|
15.0%
|
12.3%
|
16.9%
|
22.1%
|
22.4%
|
US Silver -
% of Silver Total
|
12.1%
|
8.0%
|
15.9%
|
15.6%
|
14.1%
|
US Bronze - % of Bronze
Total
|
10.5%
|
9.8%
|
14.3%
|
16.1%
|
10.0%
|
Source: International Olympic
Committee
In 2016 the US received more
gold medals than ever in a non-boycott Olympics. The US won more of each medal
type than any nation has in 40 years. And most impressive, the US Olympic women
dominated
our successful male Olympians, accounting for 60% of US gold medals this year. Although
the good old Olympic days were quite worthy at times, they weren’t as
impressive as this year. For the Olympics, it’s current days, 1; olden days, 0.
Public Health.
Next I surveyed 3 aspects of public
health during the past 5 decades; life expectancy, infant mortality and birth
rate. How has US average life expectancy at birth changed since the good old
days? With all the reported mayhem currently flooding the news, are we now
living longer or shorter than we were?
Table 2 shows that the
average American is living about a decade longer than she or he would have 55 years ago. That’s a very large increase due to
several factors, including improved health care and enhanced public
infrastructure (better water-treatment, cleaner air and improved medical/health
knowledge). Would you rather live in 1970, when your expected adult lifetime
was 71 years, or now when you may enjoy almost 80 years of life? If you could,
this doesn’t seem a hard choice to make.
Table 2: US Life Expectancy,
Infant Mortality and Birth Rates, 1960-2015
Year
|
Average
Life Expec-tancy at birth for Men and Women (Years)
|
Infant
Mortality - Deaths per 1000 live births
|
Birth Rate
- Births per 1000 population
|
1960
|
69.77
|
26.0
|
3.65
|
1970
|
70.81
|
20.0
|
2.48
|
1980
|
73.66
|
12.6
|
1.84
|
1990
|
75.22
|
9.2
|
2.08
|
2000
|
76.64
|
6.9
|
2.06
|
2010
|
78.54
|
6.1
|
1.93
|
2015
|
79.68 (est.)
|
5.9
|
1.89
|
Source: Data360.org, CIA World Factbook, CDC and Infoplease.com.
Infant mortality and birth
rates are also shown in Table 2. Infant mortality rates have been cut by more
than 300% during the 5 decades since 1960. One infant in 50 died in his/her
first year in 1970. Such a high mortality rate now seems deplorable, until you
realize that the US infant mortality rate about a century ago – in 1910 – was a
staggering 96.5. Now less than one infant in 166 dies during their first year.
Despite this impressive
health success, currently the US has only the 57th lowest national infant mortality
rate. It is higher than many other advanced nations, perhaps because the US has
more pre-term births than other nations.
Finally, the American birth
rate has steadily fallen since the 1990s. In 2015 the number of births per 1000
population is 1.89, below the replacement rate of 2.1 births that is required
to maintain the population level. Following this decline in birth rate, US
household size has also waned. In 1960, average household size was 3.33
persons, by 2015 it is 2.54 persons.
Presently, we are living
longer, being born far more safely,
though we’re not pro-creating as often as in the past. From a public health perspective,
don’t turn the clock back, the current days are indisputably better.
Macroeconomic Conditions. I now examine
5 inter-related economic characteristics to assess how our overall economic
climate has changed. These characteristics are shown in Table 3; growth
of our real Gross Domestic Product (GDP), real median household income (in 2014$),
unemployment and change in consumer prices.
Table 3: Macroeconomic
Conditions, 1960-2015
Year
|
GDP Growth
(Annual)
|
Median
Household Income*
|
Unemploy-ment
Rate
|
Increase
in Consumer Prices (CPI)
|
1960
|
2.6%
|
$38,317
|
5.5%
|
1.4%
|
1970
|
0.2%
|
$47,538 (2.4%)
|
4.9%
|
5.6%
|
1980
|
-0.2%
|
$48,587 (0.2%)
|
7.1%
|
12.3%
|
1990
|
1.9%
|
$51,669 (0.6%)
|
5.6%
|
6.1%
|
2000
|
4.1%
|
$57,724 (1.2%)
|
4.0%
|
3.4%
|
2010
|
2.5%
|
$53,507 (-0.7%)
|
9.6%
|
1.5%
|
2015
|
2.6%
|
$56,500 (0.2%)
|
5.1%
|
0.7%
|
*Average annual change in
parentheses.
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics
Wishing to live in conditions
similar to 1970, 1980 or 1990 would not be advised. There was no real GDP
growth in 1970; unemployment was low, mortgage interest rates were high, above 7%,
and consumer inflation was 8 times as high as in 2015. Stagflation was alive
and much too well in 1980; real GDP declined – a recession was occurring –
consumer price inflation was over 12% and median real household income had
grown only 0.2% annually since 1970. 1990 saw economic growth improve; but real
household income had averaged 0.6% per year growth since 1980; inflation was 8
times as high as in 2015. From a macro perspective 2010 was much better than
previous decades with respect to inflation, except that unemployment remained elevated
from the 2005-07 recession. There have been 8 recessions since 1959. And more
unsettling,real median household income decreased 0.2% since 2000 through 2015. Was America as “great” in these past years?
No. From a macroeconomic vantage point, current days are much better, despite finally improved but lackadaisical household income growth.
Socio-Economic Conditions. Table 4
presents several socio-economic factors that contribute to people’s sense of
how well or poorly our nation is doing. These factors include home prices, mortgage
interest rates, labor force participation since 1960, people’s confidence in
the executive branch of our government and the public’s overall satisfaction
with how things are going in the nation.
Home ownership in America has
long been inextricably linked to attaining the American Dream. The US housing stock
is the largest asset class in the world, worth about $26 trillion. At the end
of 2015, home mortgages totaled $13.8
trillion (75% of our GDP). The Economist
recently estimated the total public subsidy
provided for home-owner debt is $150 billion per year, which is 5 times as large as the
major subsidies provided to private energy corporations. Residential housing has
represented the majority of US families’ wealth for decades, in part because just
55% of Americans said they directly own any company stocks in a 2015 Gallup survey. Accordingly,
it’s no surprise that the cost of mortgages is important to millions of people.
Table 4 shows how the prices of homes and mortgage interest rates and the labor
force participation rate for men and women have changed over time.
The labor force participation
rate (LFPR) measures the number of employed and unemployed people as a
percentage of the population aged 16 years and over. A rising LFPR indicates a
strengthening labor market. The LFPR level can change for several reasons: first,
the demographic composition of our population (more older workers retiring,
fewer young people entering the work force); and second, what part of the
business cycle (peak or nadir) the economy is in.
The final factors in Table 4
are confidence in the executive branch of our government and overall satisfaction,
based on telephone survey responses.
Table 4: Socio-Economic
Conditions, 1960-2015
Year
|
Case -
Shiller Real Housing Price Index (1945-46=100)
|
Mortgage
Interest Rate
|
Labor
Force Participation Rate
|
Homicide
Rate (per 105 people)
|
Confidence
in Executive Branch**
|
Overall
Satisfaction
|
|
Men
|
Women
|
||||||
1960
|
126.99
|
--
|
83.3%
|
37.7%
|
5.1
|
--
|
--
|
1970
|
125.61
|
7.55%
|
79.7%
|
43.3%
|
7.9
|
18.8%
|
--
|
1980
|
127.67
|
13.74%
|
77.4%
|
51.3%
|
10.2
|
17.8%
|
19%
|
1990
|
136.64
|
10.13%
|
76.4%
|
57.5%
|
9.4
|
16.5%
|
55%
|
2000
|
150.70
|
8.05%
|
74.8%
|
59.9%
|
5.5
|
17.2%
|
69%
|
2010
|
154.66
|
4.69%
|
71.2%
|
58.6%
|
4.8
|
14.6%
|
23%
|
2015
|
174.73
|
3.85%
|
69.1%
|
56.7%
|
4.5*
|
12.0%+
|
32%
|
*This is the 2014 national
homicide rate, the latest available.
**Average percent of respondents
that stated “a great deal” when asked the question, “How confident are you in
the executive branch of the federal government?” from surveys performed in each
decade.
+ This is the 2014 survey
response, the latest available.
Source: multpl.com, Freddie Mac,
Bureau of Labor Statistics, FBI, GSS, Gallup.
The Case-Shiller Real Housing
Price Index shows changes in real residential home prices, as of December of
each year shown. This index has been calculated since 1900. From Table 4 we can
see that real home prices have steadily increased since 1970. The maximum value
in this index occurred in December 2005, when it was a startling 220.6, before
the “housing bubble” popped, ushering in the 18 month “great recession” in
2007. As shown, housing prices have recovered some by 2015. Mortgage rates also
varied considerably since 1970. The good old days for housing were better (for
buyers) than now because prices were significantly lower than now, although
mortgage interest rates were not. In 1980 interest rates were a stunning 13.74%
and in 1990 mortgage rates still surpassed 10%. During the past several years
mortgage rates have remained at historic lows, as shown in 2015, but rising
prices of homes has created affordability issues in a growing number of cities, especially
in the San Francisco Bay Area, Seattle, New York City and Washington, DC. Are
the good old housing days better? No; not in terms of the cost of mortgages.
But yes, in terms of the cost of housing.
The men’s and women’s labor
force participation rates have headed in opposite directions during the past 5
decades. Demographic trends have had an over-arching influence on the LFPR. Ten-thousand Boomers are now aging-out and retiring from the labor
force every day. Also, more and more young adults have been attending college instead of directly entering the labor force after high school. For
about a decade more women have received Associate and Baccalaureate degrees
than men. As shown in Table 2, the US birth rate has steadily dropped, which
ultimately will result in a smaller total work force unless politically-sensitive
external factors like immigration counter this trend. Aside from the
demographic influences, the drop in both women and men’s LFPR from 2010 to 2015
likely reflects the lingering and unaddressed challenges of getting discouraged
workers to re-enter the labor force after the 2005-07 recession.
For the reasons just cited,
the men’s LFPR has steadily declined, from 83.3% in 1960 to 69.1% in 2015. This
drop has a host of unfortunate consequences including personal angst and upset
as well as lost personal and public economic benefit. In contrast, women’s LFPR
solidly increased through 2010 from 37.7% in 1960 to 58.6% in 2010, reflecting
the significant growth in women’s contributions to our nation’s economic
activity, influence and progress during the second half of the 20th century and
beginning of the 21st century.
From the LFPR perspective,
the good old days were brighter than more recent times for men. This is not
true for women or for college graduates; recent days are better.
The US national homicide rate
(the number of persons who die from murder or non-negligent manslaughter per
100,000 people) is tracked by the FBI. Homicide rates were considerably higher
in the United States during the 1970s, 80s, and 90s (over twice as high as in
2014). During the past 25 years, national homicide rates have fallen nearly
continuously. One would have to travel back to 1957, when the homicide rate was
4.0, to find a lower rate
than the most recent homicide rate.
The good old days most
definitely were not better than now, as far as people being murdered and killed.
Donald Trump’s rants about entire cities being “war zones” over-run by crime
and mayhem are fact-free fantasy that have engendered fear where violent crime
has diminished. Nevertheless, national statistics like this one should not
cloak notable local crime problems such as killings in South Chicago and other locales.
The public’s confidence in
the executive branch is measured via the General Social Survey (GSS), a
well-regarded phone survey administered at the University of Chicago. There
have been 28 surveys performed between 1973 and 2014 that respondents stated how
much confidence they had when asked the question, “How confident are you in the
executive branch of the federal government?” The average percentage of
respondents who said they had a great deal of confidence is shown in Table 4. As
you can see the average across the 5 decades that the question has been asked,
although the percentage has declined, it does not change much until the 2010s,
when it starts to dip to a mere 14.6% in the surveys done in that decade. In
2014, only 12% of the respondents had great confidence in the executive branch.
For some perspective, as low as this 12% is, it is more than twice as large as
the public’s confidence in Congress (5.6%). The good old days were better.
Overall Satisfaction is measured
from a monthly phone survey by the Gallup organization that was begun in 1979.
The percentage of nationally-representative adults who answered I’m “satisfied”
to the question, “In general, are you satisfied or dissatisfied with the way
things are going in the US at this time?” Overall satisfaction with the way
things are going rises and falls quite a bit over time, as illustrated in in
the table. In 1980, during one of the 8 post-1959 US recessions, satisfaction
was very low, only 19% of survey respondents said they were satisfied. This
level of “un-satisfaction” is close to the 12% realized in July 1979. 1990
showed a much higher satisfaction rate, 55%. In 2000, when the macroeconomic
situation was much stronger (see Table 2), overall satisfaction was 69%, near
the all-time high of 71% that occurred in February 1999. Since 2000 it has
slipped to 23% in 2010 and 32% last year. The good old days, here meaning the early
1980s and 1990s, showed less overall satisfaction than the early 2000s.
The envelope, please. I tallied the scores of the
good old days and the present days for the 15 characteristics I’ve discussed
above. The present days have an impressive and winning .646 batting average;
the good old days have a weaker .336 batting average, about 50% lower than the
present days’ performance. The present days reign.
Despite there being a couple
of reasons for nostalgia, the goodness of olden days heavily depended on who
you were, what your socio-economic situation was and where you came from.
My assessment is admittedly only
a partial validation of our current circumstances. Several inter-related, important
stains remain; including inequality that inhibits socio-economic mobility, dogged
poverty (about 10% of Americans are poor, including 20% of our children) and
Congress’ obdurate unwillingness to enact needed expansionary fiscal policy. Our
multi-layered political dysfunction has thwarted the achievement of higher,
more equitable growth.
Is our nation great? Yes. Can
we do better? Certainly.
We can do better if we ease our
unwarranted pessimism, our misplaced nostalgia and our fraught anxieties to
better appreciate how well we have been doing now and can do in the future.
Looking backwards and pining for the good old days will not create wide-spread advancement.
I remain an Optimista. A
greater future is achievable. Our public and private institutions remain
world-class, perhaps even Olympian. With the right focus, sustaining will and fitting
public and private action, as well as proper election results, we can affect
much-improved progress and continued greatness.