This piece seems like it was written by someone writing strictly from American perspective without seeing what happens elsewhere.
Inflation in America is not, and was not anywhere in this post-Covid episode, worse than in any other developed nation except Japan, which has so many problems hardly anyone will want to use it as a point of reference.
U.S. economy is in better shape than almost any other advanced nation (and poor countries may be doing better but exactly because they are poor, they are playing technology catch-up, once they are caught up they have no avenues for quick growth and are stuck on Eastern European level). It is both currently richer, and grows faster, and is more stable, and provides more ways for an everyday, layman person to invest. Europeans don't buy stocks of European companies - because they know those companies are ridden with protectionist rules and omnipowerful unions - in all of which they actively, and cynically, participate - and will never give a good return. They buy American stocks.
America is virtually insulated from global warming because it's so big and diverse: some places may be wrecked but others will even win - no other nation is like that. It is virtually insulated from potential wars or invasions due to protection of the oceans. It is safe from any demographic issues because it has a guaranteed stream of immigrants with a lot more brains and money than any other country can hope attracting. It has an attitude to politics where people don't expect politicians to do much, apart from entertaining them, an expectation current generation of politicians fulfils brilliantly. Because there is no way America can be wrecked by politicians NOT doing something (as everything was built from the ground up with exactly that expectation - the government not doing anything), only threat comes from government actuallY DOING very wrong things - but American political system is built to very effectively prevent that.
All in all, comparing America to other rich places, it is evidently the best place to be for the rest of XXI century, at least as long as you have cash.
Inflation in America is not, and was not anywhere in this post-Covid episode, worse than in any other developed nation except Japan, which has so many problems hardly anyone will want to use it as a point of reference. U.S. economy is in better shape than almost any other advanced nation (and poor countries may be doing better but exactly because they are poor, they are playing technology catch-up, once they are caught up they have no avenues for quick growth and are stuck on Eastern European level). It is both currently richer, and grows faster, and is more stable, and provides more ways for an everyday, layman person to invest. Europeans don't buy stocks of European companies - because they know those companies are ridden with protectionist rules and omnipowerful unions - in all of which they actively, and cynically, participate - and will never give a good return. They buy American stocks.
America is virtually insulated from global warming because it's so big and diverse: some places may be wrecked but others will even win - no other nation is like that. It is virtually insulated from potential wars or invasions due to protection of the oceans. It is safe from any demographic issues because it has a guaranteed stream of immigrants with a lot more brains and money than any other country can hope attracting. It has an attitude to politics where people don't expect politicians to do much, apart from entertaining them, an expectation current generation of politicians fulfils brilliantly. Because there is no way America can be wrecked by politicians NOT doing something (as everything was built from the ground up with exactly that expectation - the government not doing anything), only threat comes from government actuallY DOING very wrong things - but American political system is built to very effectively prevent that.
All in all, comparing America to other rich places, it is evidently the best place to be for the rest of XXI century, at least as long as you have cash.