Is the U.S. still "exceptional"? Younger Americans aren't sure

3 min read Original article ↗

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.

The big picture: China is increasingly not the big, bad wolf in the eyes of young people, who are encountering the country through cultural touch points like the ugly-but-cute Labubu dolls and innovations like TikTok rather than national security threats.

Context: Older Americans who came of age during the Cold War are more likely to harbor deep grievances toward Chinese aggression, and are generally more financially secure.

By the numbers: About 68% of 18 to 29 year olds say China has either equal or more power and influence than America.

Zoom in: Overall, 47% of Americans say China is already more powerful than the U.S. or will be within five years.

What we're watching: As younger generations gain influence, their skepticism toward U.S. dominance could reshape debates over capitalism, interventionism and competition with China.

Go deeper: Anxiety fuels Gen Z's retirement planning