American dream still burns bright for many – but results vary
Men in their 30s earn about $5,000 less in real terms than their fathers' generation did, according to a new study.
By Peter Grier | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
If the American dream means doing better than your parents did, then Mike Brockman's not living it. Single, with a 10-year-old daughter, he's a server at a Black Angus restaurant in Mesa, Ariz. His father at his age had a good, steady job as a machinist at TRW.Today "there aren't the kind of jobs available you used to get with a high school education, and work yourself up," says Mr. Brockman. "Now you have to have training or experience to start – then you can work your way up from there."
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