Economic Anxiety Index®

Why Americans feel the economy is rigged

Nancy Marshall-Genzer Jun 29, 2016
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A majority of Americans think the economy is rigged, according to our Marketplace-Edison Research Poll. theloushe/Flickr
Economic Anxiety Index®

Why Americans feel the economy is rigged

Nancy Marshall-Genzer Jun 29, 2016
A majority of Americans think the economy is rigged, according to our Marketplace-Edison Research Poll. theloushe/Flickr
HTML EMBED:
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We asked a new question in our Marketplace-Edison Research Poll — this time, whether the U.S. economy is rigged in favor of certain groups. 

Almost 71 percent of the people we polled said yes.

I visited a family in Long Island to find out why people feel this way. The streets in their town of Franklin Square are lined with cozy, Cape Cod-style homes.

I stop at Alexandra Singh Shergill’s house.

She’s 24. She just graduated from college with a business degree. She’s now living at home and working at Barnes & Noble. She’s convinced the economy is rigged.

Alexandra Singh Shergill and her mother, Cheryl Friedman-Singh.

Alexandra Singh Shergill and her mother, Cheryl Friedman-Singh.

“Yeah – how could it not be?” she asked. “It’s geared toward a certain demographic.”

Singh Shergill said that demographic is the wealthy. I ask her and her mom, Cheryl Friedman-Singh, another question on our survey.

Does Wall Street do more to help or hurt the lives of most Americans? Alexandra said it does both. Her mother insists it hurts.

“Unless you’re in the know,” she said. “Unless you’re in the club, you don’t benefit.”

In fact, 69 percent of our poll respondents who said the economy is rigged also said Wall Street hurts Americans.

Even though she agrees, Friedman-Singh still said her daughter is more jaded than she is, and even as a little girl,  just knew people couldn’t be trusted.

“Oh yeah, she knew it,” Friedman-Singh said, laughing. “I wasn’t like that!”  

Alexandra said maybe she is a little jaded about the economy being rigged. Because she grew up during the financial crisis. She says it polarized her generation into go-getters and those who’ve given up.

“They’d rather just live in a delusion in their bedroom than go out and get something,” she said.

Jacob Hacker said Alexandra is right. He teaches political science at Yale and studies inequality. He said the financial crisis left baby boomers and millennials uneasy.

“For younger Americans that unease is tied up with an idea that this may be the permanent state of affairs and we’ll need some serious reforms,” he said.

Alexandra expects bipartisan reforms from Congress and the White House. 

“It’s broken. The economy’s broken – fix it,” she said, emphatically.

But even though she thinks the economy’s broken and rigged, Alexandra still believes in the American dream.  It’s attainable, she said. You just have to work a lot harder to get it.

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