Study
shows Americans Haven't Been
This Sad Overall Since Nixon; only 14% say they are “very happy”
Three months into the
coronavirus pandemic, which has now killed more than 116,000 Americans, people
across the United States are reporting lower levels of happiness than at any
point since the 1970s—nearly 50 years ago.
According to the Covid Response Tracking Survey, conducted
late last month by NORC at the University of Chicago, just 14% of Americans
report that they are "very happy."
The researchers compared their
findings to those of the General Social Survey, taken every other year since
1972, and found that at least 29% of respondents to that poll have always
reported feeling "very happy" with their lives.
Just two years ago, when the last
General Social Survey was taken, 31% of Americans said they were "very
happy."
As many Americans avoid large gatherings, cancel planned vacations, suffer job loss, and stay at home as much as possible even while state economies are reopening, 50% of respondents told the Covid Response Tracking Survey that they feel isolated, up from 23% in 2018.
The survey was taken between May 21
and May 29, with 2,279 Americans polled. While the research was being
conducted, a nationwide uprising over police brutality and racial injustice
exploded after George Floyd became the latest black American killed by police
officers during an arrest.
The protests gave way to new
incidents of police officers using excessive force, with Washington, D.C.
officers tear-gassing protesters, reportedly at the direction of the White
House; NYPD officers driving an SUV into a crowd of demonstrators, and hundreds of other cases.
The survey was also taken as the
country faced its worst unemployment crisis since the
Great Depression. More than 33 million Americans were out of work in early May.
Long lines at food banks across the country and reports of a third of Americans being unable to
pay their rent or mortgage payments in May have illustrated the precarious
financial circumstances in which many lived before the pandemic.
Meanwhile, the government has
been reticent to offer more financial assistance to Americans than a one
time $1,200 direct payment and an extra $600 per week on top of regular
unemployment benefits, which are set to expire in July.
Democratic and Republican leaders alike have scoffed at more robust proposals that would allow workers to socially distance for the duration of the pandemic without losing their incomes—similar to measures which were adopted by other wealthy countries at the beginning of the pandemic.
Democratic and Republican leaders alike have scoffed at more robust proposals that would allow workers to socially distance for the duration of the pandemic without losing their incomes—similar to measures which were adopted by other wealthy countries at the beginning of the pandemic.
"It's been one thing after
another," Lexi Walker, a respondent who experienced several personal
losses just before the pandemic, reported to the survey. "This is very
hard. The worst thing about this for me, after so much, I don't know what's
going to happen."
The survey also found that Americans
currently feel little optimism about the future. Only 42% believe their
children will have a better quality of life, compared with 57% who said so in
2018.