America Becomes a Defeatist Nation
People in Spain, Greece, Russia and China are down on America. That’s not surprising.
But Americans are down on America too, and the trend, paradoxically, seems to be getting stronger as working and economic conditions improve. The United States, it seems, is becoming a defeatist nation.
A recent poll by the Pew Research Center found, for example, that the percentage of Americans who feel China is becoming the world’s leading superpower rose from 36% in 2008 to 47% this year. Other polls show that 59% of Americans feel their nation is on the wrong track, up from 55% at the start of the year. The percentage of Americans satisfied with life in the United States is close to record lows, and of course Americans remain disgusted by the political antics in Washington, which 77% of Americans think are harming the nation.
Related: U.S. vs. China: D.C. Dysfunction Gives People's Republic an Edge
There are legitimate reasons for this national dyspepsia. We’re clearly in the midst of an economic transformation that is upending the middle class and making it harder to get ahead. Unemployment is stubbornly high, real household income has declined during recent years, and nobody in charge seems to have any answers about how to reinvigorate the U.S. economy.
Still, as The Daily Ticker's Aaron Task and I discuss in the above video, Americans seem to be dramatically underestimating the prospects for their own nation while assuming the grass is a lot greener than it really is on the other side of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The U.S. economy has grown for 4 years straight, and while growth is still too slow, U.S. banks are healthy again, the housing market is recovering, and overspent consumers have largely repaired their finances.
Businesses have shown an impressive ability to shrug off the buffoonery in Washington and make money regardless. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has hit a new record high at least two dozen times this year, despite higher taxes and government spending cuts that have damaged the economy. Some sectors, such as energy and parts of the tech industry, are booming, and there are still opportunities to find prosperity. “We’re starting to see a lot of resilience coming back,” says Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at forecasting firm IHS Global Insight. “I’d rather have our problems than the ones in Europe or Japan.”
That’s because Europe remains mired in recession, with an unemployment rate of 12.1%, which is 4.5 percentage points higher than in the U.S. In Spain, unemployment is a ghastly 26.9%. Japan is showing signs of rejuvenation under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s aggressive Federal Reserve-style stimulus plan. But Japan is also coming off two decades of stagnation and it’s unclear how long it will take to emerge from the doldrums.