Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 6
New York Times publishes opinion analysis of 1980s yuppies' impact
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 6

New York Times publishes opinion analysis of 1980s yuppies' impact

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 6
  • The article argues Manhattan's young finance and law workers echo the 1980s cohort that reshaped cities, work culture and class divisions.
  • It says deregulation under Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan boosted Wall Street, driving elite-university recruitment and expanding high-paid professional jobs beyond traditional WASP male networks.
  • The piece contends yuppies helped entrench meritocratic competition, gentrification, overwork, fitness and foodie culture, while tying affluence for a more diverse professional class to deeper inequality.
As younger generations reject the 'yuppie' work ethic, must elite professions abandon their high-reward model built on punishing hours?
The 1980s saw deregulation fuel a boom and inequality. Is AI in finance creating a similar high-stakes cycle for our economy?
From yuppies to Gen Z, has the definition of professional success fundamentally changed, or just the tools we use to chase it?