The Modern Depression Economists Can’t See
We’ve been waiting for the next depression to arrive. The record suggests we
should stop waiting and start looking around.
War Changed. Why Not An Economic Depression?
World War One was trenches, bayonets, cavalry charges, and mustard gas. Millions of men died face to face in the mud of Flanders. It was horrific, industrial, and visible.
By Vietnam, war had become something else entirely: air strikes, guerrilla tactics, and napalm. Today it’s drone strikes from a trailer in Nevada and proxy conflicts fought by partners who have never met. A general from 1916 transported to 2026 would not recognize modern warfare as war at all. By every metric he knew, nothing significant would be happening.
The violence and death and destruction of war has not changed but its shape has.
“The depression was 100 years ago. We keep expecting another one to hit the same way with bread lines, Hoovervilles, men selling apples on street corners. But the world has changed. A modern depression will look completely different and we probably won’t know about it until we’re well into it, or after.”
We have been watching for 1929, scanning the horizon for a crash. Every year that the unemployment rate stays below 5% and the stock market makes new highs, economists declare that the patient is healthy. Every attempt to argue otherwise gets dismissed for comparing costs to the wrong decade with bad data.
But what if the depression already arrived?
“A modern depression will look completely different. We probably won’t know about it until we’re well into it or after.”
What follows is not a prediction but rather a data review. The question is simple: compared to the economy that actually worked, the 1980s and 1990s that delivered homeownership, family formation, retirement security, and rising living standards, what does the evidence show today?
The answer is uncomfortable and the reason we missed it is the same reason that our general from 1916 would miss a drone war: we have been measuring the wrong things.
What the Economists Say and What They’re Measuring
First it’s worth mentioning that the National Bureau of Economic Research, the only body that formally dates economic cycles in the United States, has never declared a depression and has never defined one. No threshold exists. No criteria. The word has no more clinical standing than “severe.” What we all call the Great Depression was simply a contraction so deep and long that everyone agreed the usual word wasn’t adequate.
Before presenting the evidence, let’s engage the opposition honestly. The Cato Institute published a piece in October 2025 titled “America’s Middle Class Has Not Been Hollowed Out. Far From It.” The American Enterprise Institute published a similar analysis.
Their case is real data. Real median household income rose from roughly $58,930 in 1984 to $80,610 in 2023, adjusted for inflation; a 37% increase. Real wages have grown, GDP per capita is higher than it has ever been, the unemployment rate is 4.3%. These are facts, and here is what those facts do not measure.
They do not measure what it costs to actually join the middle class. The Cato and AEI data shows real aggregate income, adjusted for inflation across the full basket of consumer goods, is up roughly 37%. That number is not wrong, it’s just measuring the wrong thing. The relevant question is not whether people can afford more on average, it’s whether they can afford the specific entry fees of the middle class: a home, a degree, and healthcare. These are not average goods, they’re gatekeeping goods and their prices did not track average inflation. You cannot buy a house with inflation-adjusted purchasing power. You buy it with dollars. And the dollars required grew two to three times faster than the dollars earned.
They do not measure what work delivers. The official unemployment rate counts whether a job exists. It says nothing about whether that job provides retirement security or the ability to eat reliably. The instruments were designed to measure the presence of jobs. They were never designed to measure whether jobs work. In 1933, the question was where the jobs went. In 2026, the question is what’s the point of having a job if one can’t afford to live?
The BLS publishes its own broader measures. U6 which includes discouraged, and underemployed workers, sits at 7.9%, nearly double the headline. Add contingent workers in temporary arrangements (i.e. gig workers) and the number reaches 12.2%, a figure which still excludes the millions who have stopped looking entirely, aged out of the statistic, or work in a lower paying cash-only informal economy beyond the surveys reach. I am not calling into question the economists’ integrity but rather their instruments. Measuring today’s economic distress with metrics designed in 1940 is the intellectual equivalent of measuring modern warfare with a cavalry count. The instrument has not kept up with the reality.
Before proceeding, let me state the obvious: not everyone in America is suffering. The Boomer who bought a house in 1987 at 3.5x their annual income, locked in a 3% mortgage in 2021, and is watching their stock portfolio set new records is doing fine. The upper-middle class professional household with two incomes, inherited wealth as a down payment backstop, and equity accumulated over decades is doing fine. The wealth concentration data confirms they exist and are thriving.
This piece is about a specific and different question: whether the infrastructure for building a middle-class life from scratch without inherited assets or equity already in the game is functioning; whether someone who does everything the system asks of them can still reach the outcomes that system promised.
The 1930s Comparison (The Honest Version)
On TikTok a “silent depression” trend compared today’s economy to the 1930s and got the comparison mostly wrong, using unreliable pre-1940 data to make dubious claims. Economists debunked it easily. But in winning that debate, they avoided a harder one.
Some comparisons to the 1930s are valid and some are not. The reasons they are not valid are themselves revealing about the shape of modern economic distress.
Where the comparison holds.
Wealth concentration has returned to 1929 levels. The Federal Reserve’s own Distributional Financial Accounts show the top 1% now holds 31.7% of national wealth, a new all-time record as of Q3 2025. Economist Gabriel Zucman’s research, accounting for offshore wealth hidden from conventional surveys, suggests the true figure may approach 40% (the same as the Gilded Age peak that preceded the Depression). The bottom 50% of Americans (66 million households) holds 2.5% of national wealth, and that share is declining.
Food assistance reaches approximately 42 million Americans. Over half of new food bank clients come from households with at least one working member. The bread line did not disappear; it got a roof, a SNAP card, and working people standing in it.
Where the comparison breaks down and why that is the point.
In the 1930s, people lost homes they already owned. Today, homeownership rates among the young look better than the Depression because three generations of inherited equity from the post-war boom mask a first-generation lockout. Employment looks better because gig work absorbs distress that would have registered as unemployment in 1933. Birth rates cannot be compared because children were agricultural labor assets then; today’s fertility collapse is happening against the highest stated desire for children in decades.
Most critically, the 1930s depression arrived like a car crash. It was sudden, violent, and impossible to miss. It generated a response: the New Deal, Social Security, deposit insurance, sweeping financial regulation. The distress was visible enough to force political action.
The modern depression didn’t announce itself. At no single point did the alarm go off. Each year is slightly worse than the last but never catastrophically worse. The frog does not jump because the water never reaches a boil in any single moment.
And here is the comparison that matters most, and that almost nobody makes. In 1933, the honest “distress rate” was not 25%. The St. Louis Fed has noted explicitly that the 25% unemployment figure excluded people on reduced hours who wanted full-time work. Between 1930 and 1932, 24% of employed workers received wage cuts, 36% in 1931 alone. Farmers losing their land were counted as employed until foreclosure. No unemployment insurance existed. No Social Security or minimum wage either. When you count everyone genuinely imperiled, the unemployed, underemployed, wage-cut, hours-reduced, farm foreclosed, and without any safety of any kind, the 25% was never the honest measure of 1933’s distress.
In 2026, the honest distress rate is also hard to calculate precisely. Not because the conditions are mild but because the distress no longer wears the face of unemployment.
The 1990s Evidence: Here’s What Working Looked Like
The 1980s and 1990s economy made a promise that people who played by the rules got a specific set of results: a home in their late twenties, children they could afford, a retirement they could survive. That economy was real, and it worked for enough people that it created a durable expectation of what American economic life was supposed to look like. Here is what happened to every one of those outcomes.
The home.
In 1981, the median first-time buyer was 29 years old. In 2025, they are 40. An eleven-year delay. First-time buyers made up 40% of the housing market before 2008. They now make up 21%. The NAR estimates a ten-year delay costs the typical buyer approximately $150,000 in lost lifetime equity. The home price-to-income ratio was 3.5x when the average Boomer turned 30 in 1985. It is 5.0x nationally today, and 8–12x in coastal metros where most high-paying jobs are located. An economist might tell you homes are more expensive because they’re bigger and better built. Someone trying to buy one will tell you smaller homes do exist and they can’t afford them either.
The family.
Americans have not stopped wanting children. Gallup’s 2025 survey of ideal family size holds at 2.7 , slightly higher than the 2.4 of the late 1990s. The fertility rate is 1.6 , the lowest ever recorded, well below the 2.1 replacement rate. The gap between what people want and what they achieve has more than doubled in 25 years. Gallup’s own analysis concludes this is driven by practical economic barriers: housing costs, childcare, delayed marriage.
The work, and what it no longer delivers.
The 1930s Depression was defined by the absence of work. One in four Americans had no job. The problem was legible: restore employment, get people back to work, rebuild the labor market. The New Deal was a response to a visible crisis with a visible cause.
The slow crash presents a different and harder problem. The jobs are there. Almost everyone has one. The unemployment rate is 4.3%, and that number is roughly accurate. The crisis has evolved from one of joblessness to one where jobs no longer deliver.
Forty-two percent of full-time private-sector workers (40.6 million people) have no access to a retirement plan through their employer. They go to work every day, are counted as employed, but will reach retirement with nothing but Social Security, which pays an average of $1,976 a month and was designed to supplement savings, not replace them.
Despite an unemployment rate that was never lower 13.7% of American households experienced food insecurity in 2024. In November 2025, the hunger relief organization, U.S. Hunger, released a report on who was showing up at their distribution centers. Nearly 69% were employed and 88% had health insurance. One third held private employer-sponsored plans. The organization’s CEO put it plainly: “Hunger is no longer defined by unemployment or poverty alone.”
One in five food bank clients with jobs holds multiple jobs and still cannot consistently afford food. One in thirteen renter households faced an eviction filing in 2025. Credit card delinquency has risen for ten consecutive quarters. Student debt has grown 108% faster than income since 2007, but unlike every other form of debt in American life, it cannot be discharged in bankruptcy. It follows people regardless of what happens to them.
This is the new condition. Not unemployment, not poverty as the twentieth century defined it. Something more insidious: full participation in the economic system, with none of the outcomes that participation was supposed to deliver. You show up. You work. The system counts you as a success but the equity, the security, the accumulation flows entirely to the people who already have it.
The historical term for this arrangement is serfdom. You work the land, you don’t starve, but you never build anything of your own.
One honest caveat is required here, the distress of 1933 was different in character from the distress of 2026. In 1933 it meant starvation, bank runs wiping out savings overnight, no unemployment insurance, no floor of any kind. In 2026 it means structural lockout of homeownership, of retirement, of the accumulating economy, while a safety net prevents the most acute forms of physical deprivation for most people. That distinction is real and should not be flattened, but it cuts both ways. The 1930s distress was visible, acute, and impossible to ignore and it generated the New Deal. The 2026 distress is chronic, diffuse, and invisible to the instruments designed to trigger a response. No less severe, just much harder to see.
That invisibility is precisely what makes it dangerous.
The money.
Nominal median wages roughly tripled between 1985 and 2025. That sounds substantial until you put it next to what it costs to actually join the middle class over the same period. Home prices rose roughly 480% in nominal terms. College tuition roughly 600%. Healthcare roughly 500%. On the same basis wages grew less than half as fast as the specific things they were supposed to buy. Purchasing power is currently declining. General inflation ran 176% over the same period outpaced by wages at 240%, but the CPI basket averages costs across the whole economy. It cannot tell you what it costs to get into the middle class, only what it costs to stay where you are.
A fair critic will note that not everything got more expensive. Electronics are dramatically cheaper. Consumer goods broadly improved in quality while falling in real price. That is true and worth acknowledging, but you cannot retire on a cheap television. The costs that fell are the costs of things while the costs that rose are the costs of becoming and staying a member of the middle class.
The wealth.
The median 401(k) balance across all participants is $38,176 against an average of $148,153. The median Millennial has $15,500 saved for retirement. The median Gen X worker, ten to fifteen years from retirement, has $44,000. Thirty percent of private-sector workers have no defined contribution plan at all. After the Great Recession, the top 1% recovered their losses in under two years while the bottom 50% took over a decade.
The wellbeing.
Americans over 60 rank 10th in the world for happiness, meanwhile Americans under 30 rank 62nd, lower than countries most Americans could not locate on a map. In most countries, young people are happier than older ones. In North America, that relationship has reversed. Young people are now the least happy age group. The 2025 report describes this as an unprecedented departure from historical patterns in which young adulthood was the happiest phase of life.
Youth suicide rates tell the same story in harder terms. Declining through the 1990s they bottomed around 2000. Then they began climbing every year increasing 62% between 2007 and 2021. The rate for ages 20–24 went from 12.5 per 100,000 in 2000 to 17.0 in 2021. While many factors contributed such as the advent of social media and technology, these are the years that followed the economy’s failure to deliver its promise.
The table below shows the full picture side by side.
Housing, wages, debt, savings, family formation, wellbeing, and mortality are all telling the same story. Something fundamental broke between the economy that delivered the 1990s promise and the economy that exists today. Instead of a sudden crash, the trends reveal a slow, continuous, multi-decade deterioration across every dimension of what it means to build a life.
The Slow Crash: What This Actually Is
There is a thriving genre of financial writing predicting the coming crash. The depression of 2026. The Great Recession 2.0. The day the debt or AI bubble finally pops. These pieces are everywhere.
They are all looking in the wrong direction.
The cliff was behind us.
A depression does not have to arrive like 1929. That assumption is the same intellectual error as expecting the next war to look like the trenches of Flanders. Every major human phenomenon evolves. The mechanism changes. The instruments we use to measure it, designed for the last version, stop registering the new one.
What our modern depression looks like: no single moment of rupture, no identifiable trigger, no week when everything changed. Just a generation that did everything right. They got educated, took on the debt that education required, worked, participated in the economy, played by the rules, and found that the outcomes their parents achieved were no longer available at any price. Not because they failed but because the conditions changed underneath them, while the headline numbers reported nothing unusual.
The crash already happened. It just took 30 years instead of 30 days.
The economists pointing to 4.3% unemployment and rising GDP are not wrong about those numbers. They are wrong about what those numbers mean. They are the general from 1916 counting cavalry and concluding that nothing significant is happening. Just as the 25% was never the honest measure of 1933’s distress, the 4.3% is not the honest measure of ours. The data that matters is not in the unemployment report. It is in the retirement access gap, the food bank intake forms, the eviction filings, the fertility gap, the happiness rankings, the delayed home purchases, and the youth suicide rate. Those instruments are measuring a different question. Not whether jobs exist, but whether they work. On that question, the data has been answering the same way for thirty years.
The pieces predicting the coming depression are waiting for the crash that would announce the condition. The condition announced itself a long time ago.
The NBER has never defined a depression, so here is my suggestion: a prolonged condition in which ordinary work no longer converts to economic security, asset ownership, or family formation. By that measure, the evidence speaks for itself.
We keep waiting for the depression to arrive.
Stop waiting. We’re in it.
Written by Maple Herriot
I’m an independent researcher based in Canada. Also on bluesky: @aredcoffeemug.bsky.social