« Rhinebeck: No one throws a party like Wild Bill. | Main | Anonymity on the Net: Prof. Friedman Weighs In. »

August 02, 2010

FT: "The Crisis of Middle-Class America".

See this one in Friday's Financial Times by Edward Luce, and with a thanks for the reminder to a fellow concerned and often-visionary Midwesterner, Mr. John Davidson. Excerpt:

What, then, is the future of the American Dream?

Michael Spence, a Nobel Prize-winning economist, whom the World Bank commissioned to lead a four-year study into the future of global growth, admits to a sense of foreboding. Like a growing number of economists, Spence says he sees the Great Stagnation as a profound crisis of identity for America.

For years, the problem was cushioned and partially hidden by the availability of cheap debt. Middle-class Americans were actively encouraged to withdraw equity from their homes, or leach from their retirement funds, in the confidence that ­property prices and stock markets would permanently defy gravity (a view, among others, promoted by half the world’s Nobel economics prize winners, Spence not included).

That cushion is now gone. Easy money has turned into heavy debt. Baby boomers have postponed retirements. College graduates are moving back in with their parents.

Posted by JD Hull at August 2, 2010 11:59 PM

Comments

Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?