Hard Work and the American Dream

Another 41% say the American dream was once possible for people to achieve. It is not anymore. And 6% say it was never possible, according to a recent Pew Research Center survey of 8,709 U.S. adults.

No one understands better than those who work hard and do not achieve the success expected from hard work. Rural Americans know people who work hard yet struggle to get by, buffeted by globalized economic forces and constricted by a scarcity of opportunities where they live. The Washington Post adds to the theory of getting ahead due to hard work.

While people all over the world have a reverence for hard work, the United States is unusual because we’ve woven it into our national mythology. The American Dream says that if you work hard you’ll succeed, and we define success in monetary terms. The inverse of that idea is that if you don’t work hard you’ll fail, and you’ll have no one to blame but yourself.

For many, there is a moral hierarchy involved: Those who work hard are simply better and more admirable than those who don’t. It’s ironic that many of those who hold to this idea with the most fervor also know intimately that the American Dream is a lie.

It isn’t hard to understand why the economic overclass and their political representatives would invest in the untrue ideas that struggling people must be lazy and that hard work is the only path to virtue and success. Those ideas help justify everything from low taxes on the wealthy to low wages and worker protections, to a weak system of social supports.

Workers understand what those policies say about how much our society cares about them. They’ve gotten the message. Which might be why in that Wall Street Journal poll, young people were significantly less likely than older people to say hard work was a very important value to them. They’re willing to work hard, but they’re less likely to believe that toil and drudgery are their own reward. Maybe they have the right idea.