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June

24

2023

Past Event

Family Affordability in America: A Story of Decline or Achievement?

American Enterprise Institute

On June 22, AEI’s Scott Winship and Angela Rachidi were joined by Oren Cass of American Compass and Idrees Kahloon of the Economist to review the evidence on family affordability in America.

Event Summary

The event began with presentations from the three panelists, each presenting original research on changes in the ability of the average American to afford a family. Dr. Rachidi presented research on income and cost trends, in which she found that income has risen dramatically over the past several decades and the costs have barely changed. Mr. Cass then presented his Cost-of-Thriving Index (COTI), which shows that it has become much harder for sole-breadwinning men to afford the costs typical of a middle-income lifestyle. Dr. Winship then presented research from an original report, criticizing the methodological and theoretical approach of Mr. Cass’s COTI.
After the presentations, Mr. Kahloon moderated a discussion, in which he teased out the sources of disagreement among the panelists, focusing specifically on how to measure changes in cost of living.

—Thomas O’Rourke

Event Description

Is it more difficult to afford raising a family in today’s economy than in generations past? The prevailing view is that it has become more challenging, but a series of recent studies offer different interpretations of the data. Some scholars conclude that income has generally kept pace with costs, suggesting that having a family has not become less affordable over time. Meanwhile, others conclude that costs have outpaced earnings, making family life out of reach for many Americans. The policy solutions, and whether there is a role for government at all, depends on these interpretations.

Join AEI’s Scott Winship and Angela Rachidi and American Compass’s Oren Cass to review and debate the evidence on family affordability in America.

Event Materials

Event Transcript

There Are Many Reasons to Cheer Up About the State of the Middle Class

April 11, 2026 | Scott Winship

This piece originally appeared at National Review Online and is reprinted here with permission. Statistics show that...

Missing Boy Jacob Pritchett Is a Reminder of Why We Can’t Leave Disabled Kids with Ill-Equipped Parents

March 29, 2026 | Naomi Schaefer Riley

It has been a year since anyone saw Jacob Pritchett. The 11-year-old boy, who is autistic...

Refocusing the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation on Achieving Deep Cost Reductions

March 26, 2026 | James C. Capretta

Spending on Medicare and Medicaid is pushing the federal budget to the breaking point, but, in...

The More Things Change, Medicaid Edition

March 25, 2026 | James C. Capretta

“Clinics” with suspect professional credentials running up bills for publicly-insured low-income patients. Outlandish claim volumes...