Brooks: Bottom Is Falling Out From Under Middle Class

Recession is worst for those who had barely made it
By Gabriel Winant,  Newser Staff
Posted Nov 18, 2008 11:36 AM CST
Brooks: Bottom Is Falling Out From Under Middle Class
Paul Pablovich at his new home in the Lakeview section of New Orleans, Saturday, April 21, 2007. Lakeview, a 7,000-home middle-class enclave has emerged as a post Hurricane Katrina success story.   (AP Photo/Bill Haber)

All boom times are alike; each recession is unhappy, however, in its own way, writes David Brooks in the New York Times. This recession will hit hardest “people who achieved middle-class status at the tail end of the long boom, and then lost it.” Even if there’s no sign of it yet, this is where to look for the next social protest movement.

Downward mobility will strike in housing, in lifestyle, in employment, and in social capital, leaving its victims more isolated and politically alienated as well as poorer. “And it won’t only be material deprivations that bite. It will be the loss of a social identity, the loss of social networks, the loss of the little status symbols that suggest an elevated place in the social order.”
(More middle class stories.)

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