As the US approaches its 250th anniversary, American discontent bubbles beneath the impending celebrations. Less confident in their own institutions and increasingly dissatisfied with their country's international commitments, Americans are venting their frustration both at home and abroad. Yet this disaffection rumbles at the same time the US has achieved unparalleled wealth and unmatched global power. Why the disconnect? In this landmark volume, Nicholas Eberstadt answers that pressing question. Drawing on decades of extraordinary scholarship, he lays out the nation's "human arithmetic" in…mehr
As the US approaches its 250th anniversary, American discontent bubbles beneath the impending celebrations. Less confident in their own institutions and increasingly dissatisfied with their country's international commitments, Americans are venting their frustration both at home and abroad. Yet this disaffection rumbles at the same time the US has achieved unparalleled wealth and unmatched global power. Why the disconnect? In this landmark volume, Nicholas Eberstadt answers that pressing question. Drawing on decades of extraordinary scholarship, he lays out the nation's "human arithmetic" in demographic, social, and economic terms. He demonstrates that 21st-century America, for all its marvels and blessings, is nonetheless beset by a "New Misery": the practical and moral dilemmas of wealth in the absence of well-being. New social afflictions hide in plain sight-among them the astonishing flight of millions of men from the workforce and the surge in criminality, with over 20 million former felons living in our midst. In America's Human Arithmetic, Eberstadt offers a compelling and frightening diagnosis of modern social dysfunction. He shows that the United States' best years may yet be to come-but not if Americans are unwilling to face the challenges their human arithmetic lays bare.
Nicholas Eberstadt was born in 1955 and, in 1985, began working at the American Enterprise Institute, where he now holds the Henry Wendt Chair in Political Economy. He is also currently a senior adviser at the National Bureau of Asian Research and has been a visiting fellow at the Rockefeller Foundation, the Harvard University Center for Population Studies, and the American Academy in Berlin. A political economist by training, he has written extensively on issues in demography, economic development, and international security over the past 50 years. He was honored with the Bradley Prize in 2012 and the Irving Kristol Award in 2020. He earned his AB, MPA, and PhD at Harvard and his MSc at the London School of Economics. Dr. Eberstadt is married to the public intellectual Mary Eberstadt; they have four grown children.
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