The Way I Heard It with Mike Rowe

478: Nicholas Eberstadt—The New Misery

27 snips
Apr 7, 2026
Nicholas Eberstadt, economist and demographer known for work on labor and population, outlines a troubling arithmetic of the nation. He discusses falling prime-age labor participation, the growing gap between producers and recipients, and a widespread fertility slowdown. Short, sharp takes on disability reform, reentry, skills training, and why these trends reshape the country’s future.
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INSIGHT

Abundance Without Flourishing Creates New Misery

  • Modern societies have solved material scarcity but face a different type of misery tied to loneliness, disengagement, and social breakdown.
  • Eberstadt contrasts past grinding poverty with today's abundance yet widespread unhappiness and degradation.
ANECDOTE

Ogden Nash Shaped Eberstadt's Love Of Language

  • Nicholas Eberstadt grew up with poet Ogden Nash as his maternal grandfather and spent summers in New Hampshire and time in Baltimore.
  • He recalls Nash reading drafts, teaching language play, and influencing Eberstadt's appreciation for precise expression.
INSIGHT

America's Demographic Edge Is Narrowing

  • The United States retains demographic advantages (immigration, higher fertility than some competitors) but those advantages are narrowing.
  • Eberstadt argues America can remain resilient only by understanding its own demographic arithmetic and acting on it.
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