In my youth there was general optimism that things year by year would get better, thanks to technology and progress. The luxuries of the few became the norm for the many as free enterprise companies made affordable cars, fridges, tvs, washing machines, gas central heating and other domestic comforts. By the early 1970s the technical frontiers had been pushed to allow supersonic jet travel slashing the time to get from London to New York and men were walking and driving on the surface of the moon. In the 1980s came the mobile phone and in the early years of the 21 st century the internet arrived to transform so much.
Today we seem to be going backwards. Supersonic travel has been phased out with no plans to resume. Men no longer walk on the moon as the US and China seek to get back there at huge cost with different rockets and capsules to the successful 1970s ones. We have decided to go back to wind power which was ditched for coal then oil and gas as they are more reliable. Power boats go faster and carry heavier loads than sailing vessels. Gas fired power stations work all the time whilst solar and wind power is intermittent. Wind power is bound to be dearer as you need back up for windless days, storage and extra grid capacity. The government tries to make gas powered electricity dearer by burdening it with high carbon taxes and only allowing it to produce when there is no wind which means the capital cost is higher per unit of electricity actually allowed and sold. The whole UK energy policy is self harm on a huge scale, burdening consumers with big bills and de industrialising the economy at a terrifying pace.
Householders are told they need to buy much dearer domestic heating systems and dearer electric cars, undermining the living standards and aspirations of people on modest incomes. This is the opposite of the post war consumer led growth that brought increased prosperity for the many. Now many do own cars government pillories motorists and invents ever more taxes and charges to deter use.
In Ireland there are big protests against greedy government using higher oil and gas prices as an opportunity to raise yet more tax from people needing fuel for their homes and jobs. In the UK people are angry about the way government cashes in, over taxing these necessities.