AI Summary of Peer-Reviewed Research
This page presents an AI-generated summary of a published research paper. The original authors did not write or review this article. See full disclosure ↓
⚠️ This summary is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified legal professional for advice specific to your situation.
Publication Signals show what we were able to verify about where this research was published.STRONGWe verified multiple publication signals for this source, including independently confirmed credentials. Publication Signals reflect the source’s verifiable credentials, not the quality of the research.
- ✔ Peer-reviewed source
- ✔ Published in indexed journal
- ✔ No retraction or integrity flags
Key findings from this study
This research indicates that:
- Financially strained individuals report higher powerlessness when they perceive the economy as good rather than poor or fair.
- Perceiving a poor economy does not significantly reduce the relationship between personal financial strain and powerlessness.
- The meritocratic attribution mechanism, wherein individuals attribute personal failure to lack of merit rather than external conditions, appears operative in both American and Canadian samples.
Overview
This research examines how perceptions of economic conditions moderate the relationship between personal financial strain and feelings of powerlessness. Two nationally representative samples of American and Canadian workers (N = 4,967 combined) completed surveys in late 2023. Four competing theoretical hypotheses were tested: amplified threat, protective economic optimism, comparison-protection, and meritocratic attribution.
Methods and approach
The study analyzed data from two independent nationally representative samples collected in late 2023: American workers (N = 2,466) and Canadian workers (N = 2,501). Participants reported financial strain, perceptions of economic conditions (poor, fair, or good), and powerlessness. Statistical analysis tested whether economic perceptions moderated the association between strain and powerlessness, with separate examination of each economic perception category relative to the fair economy baseline.
Results
The meritocratic attribution hypothesis received empirical support in both countries. Financially struggling individuals reported significantly higher powerlessness when perceiving the economy as good compared to fair or poor economic conditions. This pattern indicates that the positive association between personal financial strain and powerlessness strengthens among those who perceive favorable macroeconomic conditions. Conversely, perceiving a poor economy did not significantly weaken the strain-powerlessness relationship relative to fair economy perceptions, which contradicted the amplified threat hypothesis predictions.
Implications
The finding suggests that psychological attribution processes operate differently across economic perception contexts. When objective personal circumstances conflict with positive economic narratives, financially disadvantaged individuals may internalize responsibility for their strain rather than attributing difficulties to external economic factors. This mechanism has potential consequences for how disadvantaged populations interpret their circumstances and respond to economic messaging. Future research might explore whether these attribution patterns predict behavioral responses such as political engagement or help-seeking behaviors.
Scope and limitations
This summary is based on the study abstract and available metadata. It does not include a full analysis of the complete paper, supplementary materials, or underlying datasets unless explicitly stated. Findings should be interpreted in the context of the original publication.
Disclosure
- Research title: The Bad Side of a Good Economy: How Perceptions of the Economy Moderate the Relationship between Financial Strain and Powerlessness
- Authors: Jiasheng Liang, Alexander Wilson, Scott Schieman
- Institutions: University of Toronto, Yale University
- Publication date: 2026-04-05
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/01902725261421204
- OpenAlex record: View
- Image credit: Photo by Sebastian Herrmann on Unsplash (Source • License)
- Disclosure: This post was generated by Claude (Anthropic). The original authors did not write or review this post.
Get the weekly research newsletter
Stay current with peer-reviewed research without reading academic papers — one filtered digest, every Friday.


