In the 1930s the Labor force participation rate was almost 20% higher (https://www.dol.gov/agencies/wb/data/lfp/US-Workforce-Since-1920). Then you factor in the underemployment and gig work you mentioned as well as how inflation has been a lie since the 1990s, and I’m not sure things sucked “MUCH” harder in economic terms. We do have better toys thanks to 80 years of NSF and other government funded science, but we’re ending that now too.
I read it for the first time recently and honestly no other book has ever had such a profound effect on me.
If you look at the state of the economy before the Great Depression, it’s mirrored today. Just replace Hoover with Trump.
Eh, no. It’s bad, sure, but we’re a long way from the state of the economy right before the Great Depression. Here’s an example:
Unemployment peaked around 25% in 1933. The worst of COVID was 14.8% in April 2020.
Housing. The cost of living. Underemployment. Unemployment. Gig work. It all sucks ass right now, but it sucked MUCH harder 100 years ago.
The answer today is the same as back then. Vote better.
In the 1930s the Labor force participation rate was almost 20% higher (https://www.dol.gov/agencies/wb/data/lfp/US-Workforce-Since-1920). Then you factor in the underemployment and gig work you mentioned as well as how inflation has been a lie since the 1990s, and I’m not sure things sucked “MUCH” harder in economic terms. We do have better toys thanks to 80 years of NSF and other government funded science, but we’re ending that now too.