Will the 2020s Really Become the Next Roaring Twenties?

In a dark moment, some predict a new economic and cultural boom. Here’s the reality

Steve LeVine
Marker

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Vintage flapper girl photoshopped wearing a blue face mask, holding a cell phone with a money bill stack going up and down.
Photo illustration, sources: Vintage Images; Jasmin Merdan/Moment; Issarawat Tattong/Moment (via Getty)

In recent years, leading economists, investors, and journalists have painted a decidedly grim vision of our near future: The U.S. economic system and society itself are coming apart, these dystopian voices have said, beset by one of the darkest chapters in the country’s history, including a pandemic, a jobs apocalypse, and now a deadly attack on Congress.

Yet, in one of the most whiplash-inducing spiritual flip-flops in memory, the new zeitgeist for the next decade is shimmering positivism. The Economist is tantalized by hints of “a new period of economic dynamism,” and the Financial Times of “a once-in-a-century boom.” The Wall Street Journal foresees the best era for manufacturing since the 1990s, and even Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, one of the most convinced curmudgeons in economics, is foreshadowing a fresh period of expansion. Observing so much sunniness, economics blogger Noah Smith has compiled highlights into a “techno-optimism roundup.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, these positivists have declared what they are predicting “the new Roaring Twenties.” A century after the iconic decade of prosperous decadence, the thesis is that the United States and perhaps…

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