Generation Gap
Although most differences in attitudes between younger and older people have narrowed over the past
30 years, the younger generation is becoming more distrustful of society than were their counterparts in
previous decades, new research by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago
shows. The report also finds that the younger generation, aged 18 to 24, is turning away from the
Republican party and that their voting rate is decreasing.
The NORC study found a great deal of convergence between generations over the last 30 years. When
the generation gap became a national issue in the early 1970s, society was going through revolutionary
changes, which contributed to large differences between the attitudes of the young and older people.
“In 1973, 12 of the 101 items we surveyed had gaps of 40 percentage points or more. In 1985 and
1997, there were only three items with gaps this large,”said Tom Smith, Director of NORC’s General
Social Survey and author of the report, “Changes in the Generation Gap, 1972-1998.”
“Distrust of people in general, or misanthropy, is the only category that showed a widening of the
generation gap across all three periods of our study, which begins by looking at the early 1970s when the
expression 'generation gap' first gained wide usage,” Smith said.
The group gap in trust is probably due to demographic changes, including an increase in divorce,
Smith explained.
The three items with the biggest gaps between the oldest and the youngest groups surveyed in 1985
were newspaper reading (44.8 percentage points of difference), approval of legalizing sexually explicit
material (49.6 percentage points), and approval of socializing in bars (53.7 percentage points). In 1997 the
three categories with the biggest differences between generations were approval of legalizing sexually
explicit materials (43.0 percentage points of difference) newspaper reading (51.2 percentage points of
difference) and having voted in 1996 (53.4 percentage points of difference).
“Changes in the Generation Gap, 1972-1998,”is the most comprehensive recent comparison of
differences in attitudes between generations as well as differences among people of the same age group at
different periods. The report is based on the General Social Survey, a major study widely used by social
scientists and conducted regularly with support from the National Science foundation.
Smith found that only 20. 2 percent of today's young people think most people are trustworthy, while
36.4 percent of the young held that view in 1973. Among today’s young people, 31.8 percent feel that most
people are fair while 43.1 percent supported that perspective in 1973.
The distrustful generation is also the disconnected generation. Compared with previous generations of
young people, as well as contemporary older people, today’s young people are less involved in their
communities.
“They are less likely to read newspaper, attend church, belong to a religion or a union, vote for
president, or identify with a political party than previous generations and are the lowest in those measures
of all age groups,” Smith said. “Moreover, on all these measures, the generation gap increased from
1985 to 1997.”
Among the current younger generation, only 20.5 percent read a daily newspaper, compared with 47
percent in 1973; 14 percent attend church weekly compared with 21.2 percent in 1973; 77.4 percent report
religious affiliation, compared with 86.9 percent in 1973; 5. 5 percent report union membership compared
with 20 percent in 1973; 27.1 percent reported having voted for president, compared with 46.9 percent in
1973; and 48.2 percent report identifying with a political party, compared with 57.3 percent in 1973.
The report contrasts how young people and people from other age groups felt about the lO1 issues at
three points - 1973, 1985 and 1997. The results were averaged with responses from General Social Surveys
taken in preceding and following years so that a reliable assessment could be made. The biggest gaps,
defined as the percentage point spread of differences, are between the young adults and people 65 years old
and older.
Overall, the gap in attitudes between generations for the youngest and the oldest segment of the
population fell from 19.4 percent in 1973, to 16.7 percent in 1985 and to 15.2 percent in 1997.
Other findings of the report in various categories:
Politics: The generation gap changed little from 1973 to 1985 on a cluster of questions related to
politics (19. 3 and 17.6, respectively) and then rose to 24 percent in 1997 as political attitudes zigzagged.
In 1973, the younger generation was most likely of all age groups to be independent and liberal and likely
to have voted Democratic in the 1972 presidential election.
In 1985, the generation had become more Republican and were least likely among age groups to have
voted Democratic in the 1984 election. In 1997, the generation was again the most independent, liberal,
and likely to have voted Democratic in the 1996 election. They are also least likely to vote and the
generation gap widened as the older generation increased its likelihood to vote.
Abortion: The generation gap fell from 11.7 in 1973 to 6.2 in 1985 and then to 4.9 in 1997. The
convergence came as the issue matured and became less important to younger people. Older people show
little change in their attitudes or a small rise in support for abortions.
Civil liberties: The generation gap dropped from 43.1 in 1973 to 30 in 1985 to 23.9 in 1997. Young
people became increasingly supportive of rights for homosexuals and older people became more tolerant.
Crime: The generation gap declined from 12. 1 in 1973 to 6.5 in 1985 to 5.7 in 1997. The declines
came as the young became more inclined to support a view also held by older people that courts should
become more punitive.
Gender Roles: The generation gap moved from 28. 2 in 1973 to 25.2 in 1985 and to 14.2 in 1997.
Older people are joining younger people in their support of more egalitarian roles for men and women.
Intergroup Relations: The generation gap in the area, which measures racial attitudes, remains large,
23.5 in 1973, 23. 8 in 1985 and 21.6 in 1997. Although younger people continue to be more supportive of
opportunities for blacks and older people are becoming more tolerant, the two groups are moving at a
parallel rate and have not converged in their thinking.