News

As the U.S. celebrates Independence Day, new data reveal that belief in the American Dream remains alive and well.
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 ...
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 ...
Some Americans believe President Trump’s economic agenda will eventually deliver the dream through a stronger, made-in-the-U.S.A. economy. Others see it slipping away.
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.
Not everyone agrees that the dream is dying. "The American dream is of individual upward mobility, not social progress toward uniformity," John Early and former Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas) said in ...
The 20th-century idea of an “American Dream” – where a sizable majority of people in the US could become or aspire to become middle-class, affluent or even extremely wealthy – is mostly ...
Some say that dream is dead today, but I beg to differ. One of the great promises of this country is that an estimated 400,000 to 500,000 new businesses were started the year I started Quill.
The American Dream has long meant a house and family. But with ever-rising expenses, can the middle class still achieve it? It's possible, with the right plan.
The same American Dream that I experienced is something worth protecting for future generations of Americans. As Americans, we’re a people defined by limitless grit, robust freedom, an ...