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The survey found that while most Americans are pessimistic about the country's direction, they remain optimistic about their own lives and ability to achieve the American Dream. Younger generations and minorities express greater optimism than other groups. There is a divide between national pessimism and personal optimism that presidential candidates could potentially tap into.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views4 pages

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The survey found that while most Americans are pessimistic about the country's direction, they remain optimistic about their own lives and ability to achieve the American Dream. Younger generations and minorities express greater optimism than other groups. There is a divide between national pessimism and personal optimism that presidential candidates could potentially tap into.

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The American Dream: Personal Optimists, National Pessimists

A survey reveals a huge gap between Americans’ pessimism about the nation and
their optimism about their own lives.
DON BAER AND MARK PENN July 1, 2015
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2015/07/aspen-ideas-
american-dream-survey/397274/

You can barely open a newspaper these days without reading how the
American Dream is dying—hobbled by the troubled economy, divisive
politics, threats from abroad, or some other intractable challenge. And if you
ask Americans how the nation is doing—as we did in a Penn Schoen Berland
poll of about 2,000 Americans from June 8 to 19, 2015, commissioned for
The Atlantic and the Aspen Institute for the 11th Aspen Ideas Festival—they
will indeed say in large majorities that the American Dream is suffering (75
percent), that obstacles to realizing the Dream are “more severe today than
ever” (69 percent), and that overall the nation is on the wrong track (64
percent).
But here’s what’s remarkable about all this pessimism about America: It
bears very little resemblance to what people actually feel about their own
lives. Seventy-two percent of respondents say they are living the American
Dream or expect to—50 percent who are living it now and another 22 percent
who believe they can attain it in their lifetime. Other satisfaction measures
are as high or higher: 67 percent feel secure about their personal financial
situation; 72 percent are happy in their jobs; 85 percent of respondents are
satisfied with their lives; and 86 percent are optimistic about the future. In
what is perhaps the most telling finding about the state of America’s self-
perception, nearly 7 in 10 respondents describe themselves as “middle class.”
The young feel this exuberance most acutely, as might be expected, but so
too do racial minorities. Seventy-seven percent of Millennials say they’re
living the dream or believe they can; among African Americans and Asian
Americans, that number rises to 82 percent. Among Latinos, it’s 83 percent.
This is a far cry from the early to mid-2000s, when Gallup polls showed
African Americans were the least satisfied with the state of the nation—
generally by about 20 points, the reverse of what it is today. And it contrasts
with a recent run of media accounts saying minorities have lost faith in the
American Dream.
We’ve seen this gap between national pessimism and personal optimism
before. In March 1996, when President Clinton was seeking re-election, 61
percent of Americans were dissatisfied with the direction of the country and
66 percent thought economic conditions were only fair or poor. But research
showed that Americans were actually very optimistic about their own lives.
President Clinton tapped into this sentiment and ran an upbeat campaign
focused on “Building a Bridge to the 21st Century.” Today, presidential
candidates on both sides appear to be taking a different tack, focusing on the
nation’s hurdles rather than its opportunities and accomplishments. They are
accurately reading voters’ societal pessimism. But if candidates were to tap
into voters’ personal optimism, they might find an opening to consolidate the
nation around a shared sense of hope.
Beyond the pessimism-optimism gap, our American Dream survey points up
five other key trends. First, the Millennial Generation—for all the talk about
it wanting to do good in the world—shows signs of being another “Me
Generation.” Respondents 30 and under were the only age group to name as
the top element of their dream job: “pays a lot of money.” Whereas 22
percent of respondents 65+ and 19 percent of those 51-64 said “helping
others” was most important to their personal American Dream, only 14
percent of Millennials did. Rather, what this age group ranked first (after
“being debt-free”) was “pursuing happiness,” which they chose at almost
twice the rate of 51-64 and more than twice the rate of Americans 65+.
Millennials even ranked the cluster of luxury items—like “traveling to other
countries,” “driving a nice car,” and “belonging to exclusive clubs or
organizations” —higher than any other age cohort. This generation grew up
with more technology and far more education than other generations, while
facing no military draft and enjoying far more permissive parenting. That is
likely why the poll shows a strong resurgence of materialistic desire among
this rising generation.
A second emerging insight is that Americans 51-64, especially white
Americans of that age, are feeling more negative than any other age group.
Only 63 percent of that group thinks they are living the dream or still will,
compared to at least 73 percent for every other age group. Twenty percent of
these respondents are pessimistic about their future (including 23 percent of
whites), while overall, only 15 percent feel so down. This despair may stem
from the burdens of caring for growing children, aging parents, and
themselves: 36 percent of respondents 51-64 named healthcare costs as the
most significant problem in America—7 points higher than any other age
group and 12 points higher than they named any other problem. It may also
be that these are the people who were just hitting their stride when the 2008-
09 financial crisis hit, and they haven’t recovered from the loss of those
critical earning years.
Third, the definition of the American Dream itself is shifting. If in the past,
the hallmarks of the Dream were a white picket fence and a couple of
children, now just over one in four respondents names “owning a nice home”
as the most important ingredient of the American Dream, and only 14 percent
name “having kids.” What respondents prioritize instead is flexibility and
economic security: top elements of the Dream are now “living comfortably”
(41 percent); “achieving financial security” (37 percent); “being debt-free”
(36 percent); and “providing a comfortable quality of life for [my] family”
(35 percent). Proponents of marriage and childrearing need not totally
despair, however—when asked specifically about the role of marriage and
kids in the American Dream, nearly two-thirds of respondents 30 and under
—a higher rate than any other age group—said both are important to their
Dream.
Fourth, Americans see substantial barriers to the American Dream, with the
most common theme being lack of opportunity, including “rules favor the
wealthy” and “economic inequality.” Republicans also tend to blame big
government, as well as values-based barriers like a declining work ethic and a
slump in moral standards. But while Americans vehemently agree that they
need solutions—68 percent say action needs to be taken “immediately”—
they are just as divided on solutions. Republicans want to reduce big
government—cutting spending, taxes, and regulation; Democrats want to
expand access and opportunity, including making college free or much more
affordable, expanding access to free healthcare, and improving access to
quality education in poor communities. That party-line split may be familiar,
but take note: Independents are only 8 points away from Democrats on their
sense of the nation’s problems, and 13 to 20 points away from Republicans.
Not since Reagan captured many disaffected blue-collar voters has there been
such potential for America’s Independents to swing so sharply in one
direction.
Finally, amid all the ups and downs of the last decade, there’s an
undercurrent of resilience about the American Dream that suggests it’s more
about opportunity than outcome. More than six in ten Americans believe the
Dream can best be accomplished with hard work, compared to only 28
percent who say “circumstances of birth” and 11 percent who say “luck.”
And Americans remain comfortable with the idea that outcomes do not have
to be spread equally and the Dream will play out differently for different
people. Nearly two-thirds agree with the statement “As long as I am able to
provide the life I want for myself and my family, it doesn’t matter if others
are substantially wealthier than [I]”—compared to only 36 percent who say,
“The concentration of wealth and privilege within the top one percent of
American society is a problem.” More than three-quarters of Americans
believe that so long as people have “roughly the same opportunities” to
achieve their goals based on effort and merit, it is “still okay” that some
people do not achieve them.
The American Dream is alive and well, in living rooms if not in the national
psyche. As the 2016 election season heats up, pundits and policymakers
should take note of not just the changing truths about race, age, and party, but
also this gap between national pessimism and personal optimism. Sometimes
the truths people live are more important than the ones they may fear.

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