News
Nearly one in four peopled define the American Dream as being debt-free. Sep. 8, 2013— -- A great number of Americans are redefining the American Dream. That was the takeaway from a recent ...
For generations, the American Dream has been the belief that anyone in the U.S., regardless of their background, can achieve success through hard work and perseverance. But, new polling reveals that ...
I believe in the traditional American dream. But it won't be around for my kids to inherit. For my Gen Z peers, the American dream is an elastic term – so elastic, in fact, that it begins to ...
As the U.S. celebrates Independence Day, new data reveal that belief in the American Dream remains alive and well.
A new study shows that a majority of Americans are living the American Dream — even if they largely don't realize it. The poll, conducted by marketing firm DDB as part of its 2014 Life Style ...
He then asked if I believed the American Dream is accessible to everyone regardless of identity; in short, yes, if they want it bad enough. The American Dream is possible, not inevitable.
According to Archbridge’s survey, young people are also the most pessimistic about their ability to achieve the American Dream: While 53% of 45- to 59-year-olds and 64% of those over 60 agree ...
Indeed, 32% of Black people say the American dream never held true, which is up 23 points from 2010, compared with 16% of others, which is up 13 points.
Economists who relate the American Dream to "social mobility" claim that, because fewer people are out-earning their parents now as compared to the 1940s, there's a decline in the dream itself.
Growing up, I believed that the American Dream—the set of ideals headlined by liberty and equality, and the opportunity for upward mobility for the family achieved through hard work—was ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results