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Dec 5, 2017 · A new Pew Research Center survey finds people worldwide are divided on whether life is better today than it was 50 years ago. Economic strength tends to predict greater satisfaction, but...
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- Regional Variations in Assessments of Present vs. Past
- The More Educated Are More Likely to Say Life Is Better
- Divisions Within Countries Point to Perceived Gains and Loses
- Political Divides on Life Today in Europe
Latin Americans stand out for their widespread negative assessment of progress over the past half-century. Venezuelans and Mexicans (72% and 68% life is worse) are the most downbeat, but nowhere in the region do more than half say life has improved for people like themselves. Across the Middle East and North Africa, views of life today compared wit...
In more than half the countries polled, people with more education say that, for people like them, life is better than it was a half-century ago. The educational divide on whether life is better is greatest in Poland and Peru (both 19 percentage points). But it is also apparent in many European and Asian nations, as well as the U.S.2 The reverse pa...
In some countries polled, views about who has gained and lost over the past half-century divide sharply along religious or ethnic lines. In Turkey, 79% of Muslims who observe the five daily prayers (salah) that are required under Islam say life is better for people like them compared with 50 years ago. In contrast, only about half (49%) of Turkish ...
Populism is often associated with nostalgia for an idealized past. In the case of Europe, at least, our survey findings confirm that populists tend to be more enamored of the past than people who look askance at some of the continent’s right-wing populist parties. For example, Germans who support the Alternative for Germany party (AfD) are 28 perce...
- Jacob Poushter
May 27, 2018 · Looking for a good argumentative essay on modern life is better than olden day life? Read this paper example to learn more about life then and now.
- Sarah Crow
- Contributor
- Working no longer means heading into an office. If you said you were "going to work" fifty years ago, that meant heading to a physical location outside of your home and chugging away until 5.
- Exercise isn't just for fitness fanatics anymore. While it's not exactly like jogging or playing sports was invented in the last 50 years, the global focus on fitness has undeniably increased in the past half-century.
- Virtually nobody has a home phone. 50 years ago, a home phone was a necessity. The number of people using one today, however, is lower than ever. In fact, according to CDC data, less than 50 percent of American homes now have a landline, with most opting for cell service instead.
- We interact completely differently. Back in the 1960s, if you wanted to get in touch with a friend, you rang them up on said land-line phone and asked how they were doing.
Jan 13, 2015 · Nick Chater, Professor of Behavioural Science, reveals in the first part of The Human Zoo on BBC Radio 4 that our belief things were better in the past is because of loss aversion and our ‘rose-tinted’ memory.
Dec 5, 2017 · Americans are split on this issue: 41% say life is worse while 37% say better. Meanwhile, half or more in countries ranging from Italy (50%) and Greece (53%) to Nigeria (54%) and Kenya (53%) to Venezuela (72%) and Mexico (68%) say life is worse today.
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Dec 7, 2017 · The Pew Research Center recently asked 43,000 respondents in 38 countries whether life is better today than 50 years ago. Back in 1967, the Cold War was tense, the United States was facing...