The Bankruptcy of Nostalgianomics
Americans are wealthier today than in the 1960s. That's not because of Bidenomics; it's because of six decades of progress.

Nostalgianomics is back. The White House and its proxies crow that the economy has never been better—and are greeted by skepticism from Americans who feel like life is less affordable than it was pre-pandemic. (To see why those Americans have a point, read "The Bankruptcy of Bidenomics.") Meanwhile, GOP politicians and partisans capitalize on this pervasive sense of economic unease to campaign for President Joe Biden's removal. In many cases, unfortunately, the call from the right is for something more than a return to pre-pandemic conditions. Many Republicans are falling back on a deeper and persistent form of historical revisionism.
What these conservatives—along with an interesting subset of technocratic progressives—are selling is a return to an imagined economic golden age. While the specifics are strategically blurry, it is generally pinned somewhere in the 1950s, or perhaps 1960, in the United States. In its most meme-ified form, it is an image of a well-groomed lady smiling at her blue-collar husband over text that reads something like: "Once upon a time, a family could own a home, a car, and send their kids to college, all on one income."
The tricky thing about this claim is that it is in many senses true, but it is much more of a statement about culture than economics, and it is utterly misleading about the relative economic conditions of Americans today vs. midcentury. Americans were objectively much poorer in 1960 than they are today. That isn't because of anything Biden did; it's because of six decades of progress.
Homeownership rates haven't changed much since then, ticking up slightly: 62 percent in 1960 compared with about 66 percent today. What has changed dramatically are the homes themselves. New houses built in 1960 were about 25 percent smaller than new houses today and lacked many features we would now consider standard, such as laundry machines, dishwashers, and air conditioning. The square footage per person was nearly a third of what it is today. In the immediate postwar period, it was actually illegal to build a house with more than one bathroom, due to copper shortages.
In 1960, there were four vehicles for every 10 Americans and about a quarter of households had none at all. Today there are about twice as many vehicles per capita. In other words, that 1960s family may have had one car, but they certainly didn't have two. And that car was more prone to breakdowns and blowouts and was generally less reliable. It certainly didn't have Bluetooth or Google Maps.
College is objectively more expensive today. College educations are much more likely to be debt-financed as well. But in 1960, only about 45 percent of kids who finished high school went on to college, compared with 60 percent today. Far fewer kids finished high school as well, meaning that for most people the question of whether they could afford to send their kids to college didn't even come up. College is also a much more gold-plated experience than it once was, in part due to rising expectations about standards of living that also inflate the other costs in this equation.
As for that single income, it was often by necessity. Wages for some segments of the population, including the smiling white man of the memes, were kept artificially high thanks to pervasive discrimination that made many jobs inaccessible to large numbers of would-be workers, including that smiling woman from the memes—not to mention black Americans and immigrants, who were much more likely than their white counterparts to rent, to be carless, and to live in two-earner households even in 1960, never mind college.
***
Perhaps the most devastating rebuttal to nostalgianomics is that the life depicted in the meme is, in fact, available to most families right now. A married couple with kids can absolutely live in a small house with a single, less reliable car and fewer labor-saving conveniences and luxuries, while sending (maybe?) one of their kids to college—and they can do it on a single income. This is not what most people choose.
To be fair, there are many ways public policy is nudging Americans away from those choices. Several forms of housing that were cheap and ubiquitous in the 1950s are now illegal, or very nearly so. Single-room-occupancy buildings, for example, are banned in many American cities, making it harder to live cheaply when you are young to save for even a small house. And the cheapest new houses available for sale in 1960 lacked more than just air conditioning. In 1960, about 16 percent of Americans still lived in houses without indoor plumbing. Good luck getting an outhouse past a zoning board these days. Even a clothesline is tricky in some places in 2024.
Late-model cars must comply with environmental and safety standards that raise the price of even the most basic models, not to mention the hefty tax hit on both the purchase of a car and the fuel you'll need to drive it. And there are likely more requirements to come, including privacy-infringing tech. There is almost certainly more demand for bottom-of-the-line vehicles than it is legal for manufacturers to supply.
Higher education debt is increasingly unmanageable thanks to irresponsible federal grant and loan policies that nudge students to take on debt that they can't reasonably repay (for more on that, see "The Real Student Loan Crisis") as well as ballooning administrative costs.
Still, the primary barrier to living in the style of the 1960s single-earner middle-class family is our own increasing standards. There are, of course, some rock-ribbed cultural conservatives who would gladly make all of these tradeoffs and more to return to the mores of the postwar period, all in the name of making America great again. But most people who dimly sense that the nostalgianomics memes are onto something wouldn't tolerate the economic or social conditions that made it possible, nor would they support the policy changes required to bring it about.
Among Americans who tell pollsters they are worried about the state of the Biden economy, one of the most commonly cited concerns is the cost of groceries. For the housewife in 1960, grocery prices would have been a major preoccupation; about 17 percent of her household's disposable personal income was spent on food. That number fell below 10 percent for much of the 2000s. It recently popped up to nearly 12 percent, thus the skepticism when Biden smiles and says everything is going great. But a return to the 1960s would exacerbate, not relieve, the household economic anxiety that plagues the Biden economy.
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Live in the pod. Eat the bugs. You're better off for it.
What a tone deaf article. I'm curious to look into the numbers, but these seem out of context and misleading. Sure, modern conveniences and better standards of living will come with inceased costs. Contrasting that argument is that technological advancements, supply chain efficiencies, and decreased material costs mean that these conveniences should be more affordable.
I'm curious how much of her comparisons are fair. The average family size in the 50s-60s was much larger on that single income (I'm going to ignore her little racial interjection.) The average family now is something like 3.5 people on 2 incomes compared to what, 5 or 6 on a single income? Having 2 cars on 2 incomes when automobile technology has had 60+ more years of development to become cheaper is not unreasonable. I wonder if that grocery statistic factors in family size and the current prevalence of dual incomes. 17% of a single income feeding 5 people is better than 10% of 2 incomes feeding 3. On top of all that, I'd be curious to see the comparison of household debt. I don't give a fuck about higher education, despite the attention she gives to it.
Inflation is out of control and has vastly outpaced wages. This is a long term trend, but that has become exaggerated in the short term. That is where Bidenomics comes into play. Biden and his establishment supporters have dramatically made the average citizen's financial situation and prospects worse. Granted it isn't all on him because the things he is doing to cause harm aren't really new, but they have been significantly ramped up under his administration.
What is the point of this article? Is it to say that the government isn't really fucking the economy as we can all see it is doing? Or is the point only to say that the standard of living has increased so we need to consider and appreciate that? To me it comes across as gaslighting in support of Biden and Democrats
Life in the 50’s and 60’s was much better,
if you were a white male.
If you look at the research from Moynihan, outside of a few states, life for minorities wells better too. More nuclear families, same educational gains, same employment gains, less use of welfare.
Of course not the same in various dem run states.
IIRC Sowell also quotes the economic and demographic stats for black Americans, and shows how the Great Society of the 1960s significantly degraded families compared to the 1950s.
I was going to say the same. There is more upward mobility for minorities these days, but the black community being used as a welfare vote farm did more damage than the racial adversity they faced in the 50s and 60s.
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Can't qualify it, but the entire street where I grew (1960s) up was black families. All owned their homes except one at the far end owned by a black landlord. Some were 'primitive' with cobbled water supply, wood or coal stoves for heat. But owned. Same with other predominately black neighborhoods; the majority were owned, not rentals.
Just last year a friend from that time told me "we grew up in a golden age" referring to that and race relations. He didn't have an inside toilet ($100 at Lowes today, plus $40,000 for septic & $5,000 for inspection) growing up.
On top of all that, I’d be curious to see the comparison of household debt. I don’t give a fuck about higher education
So student loans are not part of the household debt you are curious about?
How much if the loans fund education and how much fund college lifestyle? Many stories in the past decade showing it to be the latter.
How much of other household debt funds an unnecessarily lavish lifestyle?
MasterThief was asking about household debt generally, but if we are going to break it down like that we should also differentiate between the credit card used to buy groceries and the one used to buy a Playstation.
I don't have any interest in considering greater college enrollment as a positive development even ignoring education debt. A college education has been greatly devalued while at the same time becoming far more expensive. The Bidenomics portion of exacerbating the problem while not even proposing effective reforms is in stark opposition to her thesis that we enjoy higher standards and better economic value now than then.
In the distant past a college education not only imparted knowledge it also taught critical thinking. Which has largely been replaced with ideology.
My life is great and better than ever. Maybe yours would be too if you stopped crying on the Internet like a little bitch and took responsibility for your life?
You sound happy.
LOL good one
I'm living comfortably. That doesn't mean I have to be blind to broader trends that show plenty of decline. Calling out an article that seemingly engages in obvious gaslighting doesn't equate to whining about my own personal circumstances.
It does. Because being here accomplishes nothing other than wasting time and virtue signaling to your friends. The length of a pointless rant only reflects a person's flaws.
So basically, you're saying that since you're well off, and others here may be well off, we should just shut the fuck up instead of being concerned that most are not doing well at all?
I think no one, regardless of wellbeing, should comment on multiple Internet articles in a single day. People ignore a homeless persons rants when they're obviously high the same way I ignore your pointless rants when you obviously need to reprioritize your life. Look inward and go touch some grass.
Then, why are you commenting on them, and why do you care what's even said here anyhow?
What is the correct amount of articles one is allowed to comment on?
You're allowed to ruin your life however you want.
So sayeth the hypocrite.
Do as you say first.
Lol learn to fucking read
Then why are you here, retard?
The "broad trends" (that is, the long-term trends) do not show "plenty of decline". You are confusing your timescales.
Yes, Bidenomics (and to a lesser extent, Trump, Obama and Bush) show a recent negative trend primarily associated with inflation. But on historical scales, we are still on an upward trend and live in better times than have ever existed throughout all of history.
Consider healthcare, now a major fraction of a family's income - far higher than it was in the 1960s. On the surface, that sounds like a bad statistic. But when you look at what you get for those dollars, we routinely save people who would have died in the 1960s. We extend mobility and independence far beyond what was possible. But all of that comes at a cost.
The general goals of technological advancements are "better, faster, cheaper" - cheaper is one of three options, not the only goal. Some advancements have indeed made things cheaper. Others made things better. A very, very few can improve both dimensions at once. Do not confuse that exception for the rule.
I don’t give a fuck about higher education, despite the attention she gives to it.
She gives the attention to it as she is a part of the "elite" that went to places like her alma mater, Yale.
Mangu-Ward is a graduate of Yale University, where she received a B.A. in philosophy and political science. She lives in Washington, D.C.
She's a part of the 1% that went to these places and is out of touch with the general population (like us). Her set believes life is good under Biden, and has gotten better.
The pandemic was a de facto currency devaluation. People are going to hold a grudge. The question is against who and for how long.
The idiotic lockdown policies in response to the pandemic was a de facto currency devaluation.
It ain't that hard.
Trump has a specific economic record.
Biden has a specific economic record.
Vote accordingly.
I remember the economy crashing under Trump and rebounding under Biden.
They want you to forget that part and dial the wayback machine to 2019. Except for gas prices, when they briefly fell below $2/gallon during the pandemic. For 3 weeks.
Fucktard.
I remember the economy crashing under Trump and rebounding under Biden.
What other things that didn't happen do you remember?
I remember the economy LEAPING minutes after Trump got elected --long before he took office.
I remember leftists like you saying that we needed something awful to happen or else Trump was going to skate to re-election. That was even on Bill Maher's show......at the beginning of 2019.
I remember the economy starting to pick up in late September 2020.
And I remember it plummeting after Biden was placed in the White House.
Because those things DID happen.
(To see why those Americans have a point, read "The Bankruptcy of Bidenomics.")
Links back to this article. That's worse than linking to your own past articles.
Not a single Trump-tard can tell me which metric illustrates Donnie's "greatest economy in history".
GDP growth? His 4 year average was only 1.6% - worst since Hoover.
Employment numbers? All since surpassed by Biden.
Inflation? Lower in the Obama years (thanks to the Bush Recession).
What did we get for Donnie's $8 trillion in new deficits?
No Peanut will venture forward with a reply.
What are going to do when he gets re-elected?
Use covid and the shutdown of the economy from governors - check
Use false WH employment numbers that include returning from covid shut downs - check
Non sequitur to another dem using Obama who called 2.0 inflation the new normal - check
Blame the executive for a veto proof bill passed by the legislature - check
Still a dumb leftist - check
Citations and not DNC propaganda would be appreciated.
Then stop talking to Trump-tards and consult your fellow Democrats instead.
Only 24% of Democrats say they are better off financially under Biden, poll says
That's more of an indictment of Biden than I originally considered. Most people probably think of their financial situation in 2020 when contrasting their economic outlook under each president. Less than a quarter of Democrats thinking they are doing better in a recovery is a crazy indictment of that recovery
It goes even deeper than just that. Those 24% typically are part of the "elite" who believe life has never been better than under Biden. I linked this in the Roundup, but will repeat it here due to relevancy.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/elite-1-percent-behind-cultural-civil-war
And KMW's alma mater is Yale.
It's really weird to see the things these elites want to ban. In my experience the elitist leftists in multi-million dollar homes use those things far more than anyone else. They tend to have a Tesla as well as an expensive model of gas guzzling SUV and often enough there's an even more expensive gas sports car in the garage. The SUV is the most used vehicle in the house.
What struck me while reading this particular article on the survey was this:
They'd rather cheat so they can impose their will instead of losing fairly.
Where did Rasmussen make up those numbers from? No way is it believable that 53% favor banning air conditioning and the other numbers sound even more made up.
Don’t forget that Trump wanted the $600 stimulus checks to be $2000. Had he gotten his way inflation would have been worse, and his defenders would still blame Congress.
You know the rules. When your party’s president does something shitty, blame Congress or the previous administration. When your party’s president does something good, it’s despite Congress or the previous administration.
Don't forget ...
But President Donald Trump signaled he wouldn’t sign the bill if Congress doesn’t amend the legislation and raise the “ridiculously low” $600 stimulus checks to $2,000 or $4,000 per couple.
!!!!!! Democrats and economists largely agreed with Trump. !!!!!
Oh no. Democrats aren't against Trump as long as STEALING for wealth distribution is the crime being committed.
Never Give Up: Democrats in Congress Want More Stimulus Payments
- more than eighty members of Congress – all Democrats – have publicly come out in support for a fourth measure
Senate Democrats are moving ahead with an updated version of the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package
The Senate voted 51-50 along party lines to advance the bill on Thursday. Vice President Harris voted with all Democrats to break the tie
Biden administration's efforts under the American Rescue Plan to deliver $1,400 to each eligible adult and child
Your comment was disjointed and made little or no sense.
Are you a natural idiot or a deliberate one (and especially if you think you are fooling or convincing anyone)? How many times will you use this meme, comparing the changes from 2017 to 2021, and 2021 to the present, pretending the pandemic and government response did not happen?
GDP growth? His 4 year average was only 1.6% – worst since Hoover."
growth does not have to be large when more people are employed and doing well with little to no inflation. large growth is inflationary.
Something somebody with TDS would say.
Okay, I will. Real median household income peaked at $78,250 in 2019. The last available number, for 2022, was $74,580. Who was president in 2019? Who was president in 2022? That's why people are unhappy.
Numbers from the St. Louis Fed. Go tell them they don't know what they're talking about.
Employment? Percent of population employed, 2019: 60.8%. Percent of population employed, December 2023: 60.1%
Biden hasn't even been able to get jobs to go up as fast as the population does. (Bureau of Labor Statistics table A-1)
Inflation? In 2019, 2.3%. (It was 1.6% in 2020, but that was the start of COVID) In 2023, 4.2%. Over Trump's four years, 7.9%. Over Biden's three years, 15.3% (Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI-U)
GDP? Well, there you've got me. Of course, Trump's last year included COVID, so of course GDP went down. His first three years averaged 4.34%, though. Biden's record included 2020's big drop, and recovery, so his last three years are a better comparison. Those had an average of 7.3%, showing that if you pour a whole bunch of money into an economy, you get an increase in GDP as well as rampant inflation. For whatever it's worth, the rise in GDP for 1950 to 2016 was 6.6% per year.
Meh. The only thing more flawed than average human reasoning is average human memory. As always, people start with what they want to believe and adjust their perception of reality to fit. That's why democracy is so much fun.
Yes, we have gotten much much richer over the decades. But nostalgia does matter because septuagenarian Trump and octogenarian Biden wanted to see 70s era inflation again. So even though I am richer now, my retirement saving are eroding at an alarming rate.
One step forward and two steps back. Fuck politicians, fuck all of them.
"Once upon a time, a family could own a home, a car, and send their kids to college, all on one income."
When I see those sorts of posts on social media, they are ALMOST ALWAYS promoting a socialist agenda. Virtually all of the comments are rants against landlords, employers, and capitalism. Also, a lot of comments about how so "unfair" everything is, calling for rent controls, price controls, and taxing the rich.
I can't say that I've ever seen one that was geared toward lambasting Biden's economy. In seemingly trying to "cover" for Biden, this seems like a "strategic" article to justify the repeat votes for Biden the staff will make later.
A better article would have skipped the politics de jure and stuck with the straight comparisons it did have scattered in the article, and might have responded to the socialism implied instead of trying to be some sort of 'member berries commentary.
and usually attributes past prosperity to unions and fdr's new deal while failing to mention that the US was uniquely lucky not to have had its industrial base demolished during ww2
When I see these sorts of posts on social media, they are ALMOST ALWAYS promoting a facist agenda. Virtually all of the comments are rants against inflation, Biden, inflation, and Biden.
While I acknowledge where we are better now than we we were in the past, what I want to see from an ostensibly Libertarian publication is how much better we would be if we were 100 percent socially, economically, and politically free!
And of course, this should include ways that we as individuals and a society can get to there from here!
Beyond that, yeah, this kind of article, presented as it is here, is just digital bread and circuses to distract us from what is fucked up in the nation and the world.
Yep. It's big on highlighting technological advancements but very short on considering the negative effects of government on the economy. It downplays the economic downturn we're experiencing and financial hard times coming. Experiencing modern luxuries doesn't mean we should ignore some startling metrics compared to our past
many things are more affordable now but they don't last as long, some of that is intentional such as computer programing upgrades that require new computers to run and some of it is just crappy construction like refrigerators and other household items that used to last years.
Cars and house are more expensive due government regulations.
The author misses two of the most hideous and anti-libertarian elements of biden's economic policy.
1. the war on independent contractors
2. the 80k person blowout of the IRS
Biden critics aren't suffering from anything but Biden and Democrats policies that STEAL everyone's earnings because they sold a bunch of criminal sheep on the idea that the tool of 'guns' can create wealth. Do tell; How many full-on gangland area's are wallowing in created wealth and peace?
Leftards continuing to paint the hood as paradise is all this BS is.
Might wanna mention zero or negative interest rates. Does Jay Powell, Yellen and the magic money printing tree get a pass on significant root causes of COLA and inflation?
Buy. Borrow. Die.
Homeownership rates haven't changed much since then, ticking up slightly: 62 percent in 1960 compared with about 66 percent today.
Aaah. Equating homeownership with mortgageownership. We don't really track homownership since of course owning a mortgage means the bank has title to the home. And the motivations of mortgage-owners are quite different from home-owners. Notably, a mortgage-owner (and esp the bank which is the real homeowner here) is far more obsessed with the market price for their home because mortgageownership is more about the market price for debt. Making sure the price rises quickly and steadily enough so that the mortgage can never be underwater. Which of course means that government had damn well better make sure that happens and if it means distorting the economy and overmanaging a business cycle, then so be it. Because god forbid a situation arises like the Rust Belt where the entire town goes into the toilet at the same time and everyone has to move to the Sun Belt to find work and house prices follow the economy into the toilet leaving the town in a depression.
Further, homeownership is not a true Hayekian value. Some people value other things more - or indeed the reverse. eg the mobility to take advantage of economic opportunities. That declines significantly when everyone is a homeowner as is well understood by the aphorism - Home owning neighborhoods are more stable neighborhoods. For those folks - far more prevalent among the young and the lower-income (and those who lived in Rust Belt towns with somewhat erratic employment) - rent as a % of income is far more important and they want that number to go down over time not up over time.
Wait. Did I just say down? Rents going down over time - or phrased another way incomes should rise faster than rents? Is that what people who pay rent want? How can that happen? How can house prices rise faster than incomes and/or interest rates on mortgages while rents rise slower than incomes at the bottom of the ladder?
Sure enough - rents as a % of income have risen from a bit over 15% in 1960 to over 30% now. Which means this is a utilitarian game of winners and losers not some shitty Reason view of 'economic well-being'. Though not a surprise that over time the losers are those who started out at the bottom as well.
Because that certainly is a Reason/libertarian value. The winners start at the top - or managed to move from a village outside Bangalore to a village called Palo Alto. Hmm. So economic opportunity through geographic mobility. What a concept.
^BINGO... "Equating home-ownership with mortgage-ownership."
Remember when the people amended the constitution so the government could start doing/regulating house loans?
Yeah; me neither ... F'En [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s].
It's appalling how many times and how many later crisis (Housing crisis, Healthcare crisis, Education crisis) have come by those who just keep believing (bigotry) Gov-Guns can make sh*t for them entirely contrary to all the evidence now as well as mountains of historical accounts. Pure Greed and Selfishness. "Guns" don't make sh*t so if people want it they can *EARN* it without 'Guns' the way Just societies are based and not like 'Gun' (Gov-Gun) toting criminals.
What sheer and utter nonsense! Median rent in 1960 was $71 per month. In 2023, it was $1,180. $71 in 1960 is equivalent to $743 today. Per capita GDP was $3,007 in 1960. It is $76,399 now. $3,007 in 1960 is equivalent to $31,471 today. Do you see the trend? Inflation adjusted rent is 60% higher while inflation adjusted GDP per capita is 150% higher. Wealth per person has far exceeded rent growth.
There is no such thing as median GDP/capita. It can only be average. Further, the correct comparison would be RENTERS income which is important precisely because incomes at the lower end of the scale (renters) do not rise anywhere near as fast as incomes at the upper end of the scale..
Second, I can see the median rent number that you’re citing and it is actually something called ‘Fair Market Rent’ which has nothing to do with actual rents paid. Rather it is a calculation by HUD to determine Sec8 vouchers. HUD specifically identifies that as roughly equivalent to the 40th percentile of actual rents paid – not 50%. Further, Sec8 didn’t even exist in 1960 so it’s all made up going back to then.
Try again. And BTW – I’m correct.
I'm not convinced that higher rates of high school graduation and college attendance is an indication of improvement, given that standards have been lowered so significantly.
A picture says a thousand words, Katherine. Or in your case, 1097.
This picture, specifically: http://tinyurl.com/3f64mfxv
Things getting better is also part of the problem, because you are basically eliminating cheaper options for poor people.
Instead of people buying a small-ish house, they can't afford a house at all. Or getting a cheap new car, they have to hope to get a used car that still runs. And EVs are going to make this worse, because of their expensive batteries that need to be replace.
Almost no one makes cheap cars for sale in the US. Only Kia, Hyndai, and Nissan. Toyota apparently has a $10,000 pickup, but they won't sell it in the US.
And EVs are going to make this worse, because of their expensive batteries that need to be replace.
To say nothing of their difficulty to insure, given that the slightest wreck forces totaling the vehicle, and their inability to be salvaged even a little bit.
Toyota apparently has a $10,000 pickup, but they won’t sell it in the US.
Homeless people can't afford an "affordable" pickup.