A Nation of "Haves" and "Have-Nots"?
Far More Americans Now See Their Country as Sharply Divided Along Economic Lines
Over the past two decades, a growing share of the public has come to the view
that American society is divided into two groups, the "haves" and the
"have-nots." Today, Americans are split evenly on the two-class question with as
many saying the country is divided along economic lines as say this is not the
case (48% each). In sharp contrast, in 1988, 71% rejected this notion, while
just 26% saw a divided nation.
Of equal importance, the number of Americans who see themselves among the
"have-nots" of society has doubled over the past two decades, from 17% in 1988
to 34% today. In 1988, far more Americans said that, if they had to choose, they
probably were among the "haves" (59%) than the "have-nots" (17%). Today, this
gap is far narrower (45% "haves" vs. 34% "have-nots").