Younger Americans see U.S. dominance slipping to China

(Josephine Walker – Axios) A quarter of young Americans think China has more global power and influence than the U.S., compared to 12% of Americans ages 65 and older, according to a new Carnegie Endowment for International Peace survey. Why it matters: Political dysfunction, economic pressures and cultural exchanges are helping to reshape how young Americans measure global power — and America’s place in it. What they’re saying: “Younger Americans are much less likely to see the U.S. as uniquely exceptional,” Craig Kafura of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs tells Axios.

Is the U.S. still “exceptional”? Younger Americans aren’t sure

Latest articles

Related articles