On a visit to the Princeton campus recently, I asked a famous economics professor a simple question, “Are we in a recovery?”

He gave me a simple, emotionless answer, “No.”

I then asked him how many of the economists in the building would agree. He said, “Every one of them.” I asked him why the media reports indicate that we are in a recovery. His exact words, “I don’t know.”

I’m concerned there’s a mistaken understanding of U.S. economic dynamism. The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Fox, MSNBC, all the networks — the Federal Reserve, too — all say the same thing: The job market is strong and the economy is growing. We’re in a recovery.

That’s only partly true.

As optimistic Americans, we really want to believe this narrative. I want to. But it is hard to square this with the fact that half of Americans are making less than they were 35 years ago in real terms. They have not received a raise in 35 years. Making things worse, the cost of housing, healthcare and education are exploding while […]

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