What Is This?
In 1997, historians William Strauss and Neil Howe published The Fourth Turning — a theory of history based on a single observation: Anglo-American history moves in repeating 80-year cycles called saecula, each divided into four "turnings" of roughly 20 years. Like seasons, each turning has a predictable character. The fourth is always a Crisis: a period of institutional destruction and rebuilding, social cohesion under extreme pressure, and generational conflict that determines the shape of the next 80 years.
The previous Fourth Turnings were the American Revolution (1773–1794), the Civil War (1860–1865), and the Great Depression / World War II (1929–1946). The current one began around 2008 and, by the model's own timeline, reaches its climax between 2026–2030.^1
What makes the theory striking is not that Strauss and Howe predicted specific events — they didn't — but that they predicted the shape of what was coming: a time when existing institutions become illegitimate, when the old political consensus shatters, when a Hero generation is called into collective action, and when the entire social order is renegotiated under crisis conditions. That description fits the last decade uncomfortably well.
Why Does It Matter?
- It gives a macro framework for an otherwise bewildering moment. The simultaneous collapse of institutional trust, political realignment, currency instability, technological disruption, and great power competition isn't a coincidence — it's the character of a Fourth Turning.
- The model predicts the worst is still ahead — and then a resolution. The climax historically involves a defining confrontation (war, revolution, economic collapse, or all three). It ends. The First Turning that follows is a High — a period of institutional confidence, collective purpose, and relative prosperity. Gen Z grows up in the crisis; they build the High.
- It changes how you invest, build, and plan. Crisis eras favour hard assets, self-sufficiency, communities, and adaptable institutions. The High that follows rewards those who positioned for rebuilding rather than extracting from a declining order.
- Steve Bannon read it as a political playbook. Bannon explicitly cited The Fourth Turning as his worldview framework — which tells you it's being used as an active operating manual by people in power, not just as historical curiosity.
Key People & Players
- Neil Howe — Co-author and continuing analyst. His 2023 follow-up The Fourth Turning Is Here updates the framework for the current crisis. He calls COVID the catalyst event — the "Grey Champion" moment that marked the Crisis fully underway.^1
- William Strauss — Co-author, died 2007, never saw the turning arrive.
- Steve Bannon — Publicly cited the book as a core influence on his political worldview. Worth understanding if you want to know how power operators are thinking.
- Ray Dalio — His Big Cycle framework (which we've covered separately) reaches nearly identical conclusions through a different methodology: debt cycles + internal disorder + external conflict converging in the late 2020s.
The Current State
Neil Howe published The Fourth Turning Is Here in 2023, mapping the current saeculum onto the framework. His reading: the catalyst arrived ~2008 (Financial Crisis), the Crisis proper began ~2020 (COVID as the catalyst for institutional delegitimisation), and the climax arrives roughly 2026–2030. Resolution — not utopia, but a new social compact — follows.^1
The convergence with Dalio's Big Cycle, with Raoul Pal's macro framework, and with historical parallels is striking. Three completely independent frameworks — generational sociology, debt-cycle economics, and physics-inspired market theory — are pointing at the same 5-year window as the inflection point.
The critiques are real: the theory is unfalsifiable in the short run, the 80-year cycle could be coincidence, and the model has survived by being vague enough to fit many historical events retroactively. But as a navigational frame — not a prophecy — it's among the most useful available.
Best Resources to Learn More
- Neil Howe — The Fourth Turning Is Here (2023) — The updated framework. Start here over the 1997 original.
- Strauss & Howe — The Fourth Turning (1997) — The original. More historically detailed.
- Neil Howe on various podcasts (2023-2026) — His interviews on Lex Fridman, Real Vision, and The Meb Faber Show are excellent.
- Konvergent Wealth: "Did Howe and Strauss Predict the Crisis of 2020?" — Good mapping of the framework to recent history.^1