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What A Time To Be Alive
Morgan Housel ^
| Sep 12, 2016 at 4:32 PM
| Morgan Housel
Posted on 09/14/2016 3:05:10 AM PDT by expat_panama
John D. Rockefeller was the richest man the world had ever seen.
But for most of his adult life he didnt have electric lights, air conditioning, or sunglasses. And he never had penicillin, sunscreen, or Advil. This is not ancient history: One in twenty Americans were born before Rockefeller died.
The majority of Americans think the next generation of adults will be worse off than their parents.
I think of two things when I hear this.
One, the pessimists are probably wrong, extrapolating a bad decade into infinity. Two, progress is like compound interest you dont even notice it in the short run, but its mindblowing when you zoom out and see what can be accomplished over long periods.
There are so many things still wrong with the world, and the future will always be hard. But when confronted with pessimism, Warren Buffett reminds us that normal Americans live better than John D. Rockefeller did.
Here are some examples of how right he is.
- Life expectancy in America has increased from 47 years in 1900 to 78 years in 2011. Thats great. Heres whats better: The majority of that gain has come from declines in infant and childhood mortality. One in 15 babies born in 1900 didnt see their first birthday; a fifth didnt make it to age five. In America! Today fewer than seven in a thousand die before age five. The decline means 700,000 fewer kids die each year who would have died 115 years ago. Thats like adding a city the size of Seattle every year.
- To put that stat a different way: Being born in America in 1900 gave you a 79% chance of living for five years. Today, the five-year survival rate for non-Hodgkins lymphoma is 82%. So just being a kid 1900 was riskier than having lymphoma is today.
- Penicillin has saved between 80 and 200 million lives since first used in 1942, depending on whose estimates you use. Put that in context of deaths from World War I (~17 million) and World War II (~60 million), and its possible that Alexander Flemings accidental discovery saved more lives than both world wars took.
- Auto fatalities per capita have declined so much in the last 80 years that every hour of every day, 5.6 people who would have died in car crashes in the 1930s are still alive today. Put another way: Without the improvement in auto fatalities, 487,500 more people would have died in car accidents in the last decade than actually did. Thats equal to the population of Sacramento.
- The frequency of U.S. recessions has plunged. From 1860 to 1900 we were in recession 48% of the time, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research. From 1900 to 1940, 43% of the time. From 1940 to 1980, 15%. Since 1980, just over 12%.
- New homes today are, on average, more than1,000 square feet larger than they were in 1973, according to the Census Bureau. For perspective, the average house in 1900 was roughly 1,000 square feet total. So in 43 years we have added what people had in 1900.
- Microsoft sold a computer mouse in 1985 for $179, or $401 adjusted for inflation. Today $401 can buy you a Chromebook, a Kindle tablet, and an iPhone 5, with enough money left over for lunch.
- The percentage of American adults who smoke daily declined from 45% in 1965 to 18% in 2012,according to OECD. Which is to say: 65.5 million Americans who would have smoked daily 50 years ago dont today.
- The number of cigarettes sold in America declined from 640 billion in 1981 to 360 billion in 2007, according to the Tobacco Situation and Outlook Report. Put another way: Americans smoke 8,878 fewer cigarettes per second than they did 35 years ago.
- Median household income during the boom year of 1929 was about $16,000 adjusted for inflation, according to Census Bureau data. Its more than $53,000 today. What was average back then is now considered deep poverty, and whats average today would put you in the top decile back then.
- According to the World Health Organization, Measles vaccination has saved an estimated 17.1 million lives since 2000. If those 17.1 million people were their own country it would be 65th largest in the world, sitting between Ecuador and Netherlands.
- In the late 1940s to the early 1950s
polio crippled an average of more than 35,000 people in the United States each year, writes the CDC. Today its wiped out.
- According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics,there were 1.75 million children age 10-15 working in America in 1900. That made up 6% of the labor force. Today, employment under age 16 is effectively banned.
- Nationwide murders declined from 23,326 in 1994 to 14,196 in 2014, according to the FBI. The difference 9,130 per year means one person per hour, every hour, is alive today who would have been murdered 20 years ago (more if you adjust for population growth). Similarly, robbery declined from 618,949 incidents in 1994 to 345,031 in 2014, a drop of 44%. Aggravated assault fell 35%.
- A December 2015 flight from Miami to Los Angeles was delayed and took 20 hours, which one passenger told CNN was a nightmare that you cant believe. As recently as 1929 that 20-hour travel time would have been a world record.
- The percentage of women with bachelors degrees at age 18-33 nearly doubled from the Baby Boom to the Millennial generation, from 14% to 27%.
- Hip fractures have been dropping by 15-20 per cent a decade for 30 years, writes the Financial Times. One theory: Were better at providing daily mobility assistance for those who need it.
- Rates of dementia for Americans over age 60 have declined by more than a third in the last 30 years. Some think better control of blood pressure led to a decline in ministrokes, which then reduced the prevalence of dementia.
- The DailyMail writes, In 1900 a typical male was 5ft 6in tall, but by 2000 that had gone up to 5ft 10in
Researchers put the growth spurt mostly down to pregnant mothers eating better food which meant their babies grew up to be stronger and healthier.
- In 1933 there were 37 workplace fatalities per 100,000 workers, according to OSHA. In 2009 there were 3.6 per 100,000. With 144 million U.S. workers, the decline means 48,100 fewer workers die each year who would have 80 years ago. Every 14 months we avoid as many workplace deaths compared to 1933 as U.S. soldiers died in the Vietnam War.
- The average expense ratio for equity mutual/index funds has declined 34% since 1996, according to the Investment Company Institute. The drop, from 1.04% a year to 0.68% a year, on a $100,000 portfolio growing 6% a year will save you $37,000 in fees over 25 years. Put another way: The decline in financial fees has added an extra year of retirement income to the average savers nest egg.
- Historian Deirdre McCloskey recently wrote , A billion or so people on the planet drag along on the equivalent of $3 a day or less. But as recently as 1800, almost everybody did. (Adjusted for inflation).
- The global fertility rate has declined from 5.1 babies per women in 1964 to 2.5 today, according to the Census Bureau International Database. This is wonderful: Fertility declines as countries become richer and infant mortality falls. In the 18th century Adam Smith wrote, It is not uncommon in the highlands of Scotland for a mother who has borne 20 children not to have 2 alive.
- The percentage of the world living on less than $2 a day (adjusted for inflation) has been cut in half over the last 40 years, according to the World Bank.
- Americans over age 100 are the fastest growing age group, by far. In 1980 there were about 15,000 Americans over age 100. Today there are 78,000. By 2030, an estimated 138,000, according to the Census Bureau. That means the centenarian share of the population will more than quintuple, from 0.0007% in 1980 to 0.04% by 2030.
- In 1930 Americans spent more than 8% of their disposable income on energy, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. During the 1980s oil spike it peaked at more than 9%. Today its less than 4%, an all-time low. The decline in energy spending as a share of income since 1950 means the average household can spend $1,728 on other stuff each year that used to go toward energy.
- A BMW plant in South Carolina gets part of its power from methane siphoned off a nearby landfill. People dont think of this kind of stuff when making peak-energy forecasts.
- Twenty people have received face transplants since 2005, according to Johns Hopkins Hospital. This was unfathomable 30 years ago.
- The percentage of an average households budget devoted to food fell from 46.4% in 1901 to 13% in 2011, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. If that percentage had not declined the average household today would spend more than $2,100 a month on food.
- Real median wages have been stagnant for a while. But real median compensation which includes things like health insurance subsidies and 401(k) matches is up more than 40% since 1980. People are getting a raise, its just coming in the form of subsidies on ever-rising insurance premiums.
- We have a retirement funding crisis, which would sound like the most peculiar thing in the world to people 100 years ago, most of whom had no concept of retirement and worked until they died. In 1900 65.4% of men over age 65 were still working, according to the Census Bureau. And nearly all jobs were physically demanding. By the 1990s it was down to 17%.
- In 1900 the median age at death was 59. Today its 80, according to the Social Security Administration. So the average person today lives almost an entire generation longer than their great-grandparents.
- In 1900 it took four days to travel from New York to Los Angeles. Today it takes 19 hours to travel from New York to Singapore.
- The age-adjusted death rate per capita from heart disease has declined more than 70% since 1965, according to the National Institute of Health. The New York Times says this was spurred by better control of cholesterol and blood pressure, reduced smoking rates, improved medical treatments and faster care of people in the throes of a heart attack.
- Health insurance prices are rising fast. But consider that anything resembling modern medical insurance didnt even exist until the 1920s, when a group of Texas teachers began prepaying for hospital expenses. Health insurance wasnt needed before the 1930s because medical care wasnt that expensive, and it wasnt that expensive because we didnt know that much about medicine and couldnt do a whole lot for sick people.
- People uploaded 657 billion pictures in 2014,according to Mary Meekers Internet Trends Report. Another way to think about it: Every two minutes, humans take more photos than ever existed in total 150 years ago, writes The Atlantic.
- A 1996 computer catalog has an average list price of $3,412, or more than $5,200 adjusted for inflation. A Chromebook today can bepurchased for $101 and is, on every level, an order of magnitude or greater more advanced.
- Bank failures in the early 1930s wiped out deposits equal to 2.2% of GDP, according to the FDIC. Thats the equivalent of $396 billion today. Thousands of people lined up at banks, some for days on end, wondering if their money was gone. With FDIC insurance, no one with less than $250,000 in the bank has anything to worry about anymore. Thats amazing: What was once one of lifes biggest financial stresses isnt even a thing anymore.
- The United States uses less than half as much energy for every unit of GDP as it did in the 1970s, writes energy analyst Daniel Yergin. This rise in efficiency cuts the effective energy price in half.
- A new car in the 1970s might have averaged 13.5 miles to every gallon. Today, on a fleet average basis, a new car is required to get 30.2 miles per gallon, writes Yergin. Here again, the effective price of gas is cut in half without even knowing it.
- Between 1995 and 2005, Dow Chemical reduced its energy use on a worldwide basis, per pound of product, by 25 percent. Those savings are a big number; the same amount of energy would have been more than enough to supply electricity to all of Californias residents for a year, Yergin writes.
- The gold medal winning time for the mens 100-meter Olympic sprint improved by 21% from 1896 to 2012, from 12.2 seconds to 9.63 seconds. This is astounding when you consider weve been running for as long as weve been human. Our ability to keep improving at things youd think we should have mastered tens of thousands of years ago is a good reason for optimism.
- The high-school graduation rate was 6.4% in 1900, 50.8% in 1940, 77.1% in 1970, a record-high 80% in 2012, according to the Department of Education.
- Heres a short list of common conveniences that did not exist in 1940: Tylenol, Velcro, airbags, credit cards, ATM machines, nonstick pans, Tupperware, and calculators.
- Fatal airlines accidents have declined from more than 40 per year in 1970s to fewer than 10 per year in the last decade.
- Tom Goodwin writes , The worlds largest taxi firm, Uber, owns no cars. The worlds most popular media company, Facebook, creates no content. The worlds most valuable retailer, Alibaba, carries no stock. And the worlds largest accommodation provider, Airbnb, owns no property.
What a time to be alive.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: economy; investing; prosperity
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To: All
Sell in September or be dismembered I don't want to be dismembered.
21
posted on
09/14/2016 6:35:09 AM PDT
by
BipolarBob
(I'm one big walking chemical reaction..)
To: ProtectOurFreedom
always a fun conversation. --and not only more healthy but more realistic too. My dad was born in 1901 before TV, radio, the airplane --in fact it was just a few years after the Whitehouse got indoor plumbing (the Whitehouse w/ an Outhouse!). When I was born most folks in the world did not have electricity and now they do.
My theorem:
our ever advancing civilization + all the dumb people around us = proof of Divine Intervention in the affairs of humankind.
To: Alas Babylon!
See your point, but there is still nothing as good as a real, accurate map. Always have them with me on a trip, as a backup.
What I’m looking for now is a GPS with personality. Someone has got to come up with the programming to turn that thing into a companionable device.
To: Alas Babylon!
Besides me anyone else ever use one of these 'computers'?
To: BipolarBob
Sell in September or be dismemberedI don't want to be dismembered.
Aw, stocks have gone down as far as they're going to go. Let's buy now; like, what could possibly happen?
To: Alas Babylon!
On the same topic, there are some things I want to bring back. I want to bring back, for example, a vehicle for the folks that don’t need power windows or heated seats. I want them to bring back a car that has the safety features needed, but that can be easily and cheaply repaired. It won’t need to have backup cameras or CD players or blue tooth capability.
What’s happening is that consumer items are being priced out of range for many ordinary working people. There should be options for the folks at the starting levels who need basic transportation and communication options.
To: Pelham
I love all these advancements in technology. That said are we now more free? Does the modern day man have Liberty? For some reason the author fails to answer this. We can have both tech advancements and comforts of modern day living along with Freedom and Liberty. This is the dirty little secret.
To: expat_panama
I did buy some (reluctantly). Bought some Mylan at $40.00. I’m up a little but not sure if I should hold. I really wanted to buy Gold but it just hasn’t quite got to my price target. Missed it by that much.
28
posted on
09/14/2016 7:02:35 AM PDT
by
BipolarBob
(I'm one big walking chemical reaction..)
To: expat_panama
The Mizzou mechanical engineering department had one of these babies in 1969. Never could figure it out. We also had an IBM 360 which took instructions via punch cards. The changes we’ve seen in less than 50 years!
Here I sit with the morning news and no ink on my fingers! Why just 25 years ago we were reading articles like “Will the Internet become the ‘Information Superhighway’?” which were forecasting that one day we could read the newspaper on our huge desktop computer CRT monitors.
To: ProtectOurFreedom
Oops...pic...
To: BipolarBob
My thinking now is that the reason nobody knows if we’re going into more selling or more buying is because nobody’s yet made up their minds if they want to buy our sell.
I know I haven’t.
To: expat_panama; PGalt
Most of us are better off than John D. Rockefeller was. A while back, that was expressed as that an American secretary today is better off than Queen Victoria (1829-1901) was.
But I would express that differently: Slaveowners in the South were no better off than Queen Victoria, surely. And so are most black Americans.
progress is like compound interest you dont even notice it in the short run, but its mindblowing when you zoom out and see what can be accomplished over long periods.
. . . and that sort of steady incremental progress is exactly what the rules of journalism filter out. IOW, Philippians 4:8 "Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirableif anything is excellent or praiseworthythink about such things." (New International Version)
could with some justice be summarized, Dont dwell only on what is reported in the news. Journalism is negative If it bleeds, it leads and superficial, both in regard to its short deadlines and because Man Bites Dog, not Dog Bites Man causes the news to reflect what does not usually happen (and especially, what we hope doesnt happen). Since all journalists know this, all journalists know that they are negative and superficial, and yet they claim than all journalists are objective. News Flash! If you think negativity is objective, you are a cynic. Precisely what Philippians 4:8 warns against.
The cynicism of journalism is exactly mirrored in the politics of socialism, which explains why a Democrat politician can become an objective journalist, but a Republican politician cannot. Socialism is a war on wisdom.
32
posted on
09/14/2016 7:59:15 AM PDT
by
conservatism_IS_compassion
('Liberalism' is a conspiracy against the public by wire-service journalism.)
To: expat_panama
33
posted on
09/14/2016 8:01:46 AM PDT
by
conservatism_IS_compassion
('Liberalism' is a conspiracy against the public by wire-service journalism.)
To: conservatism_IS_compassion; All
34
posted on
09/14/2016 8:32:56 AM PDT
by
PGalt
To: expat_panama
I think there needs to be a new word invented for desperate attempt at laugable anti-nostalgia comparisons between what are essentially two nations that STINK LIKE A DEAD SKUNK.
Let me enlighten the hideously ignorant author with a few OTHER things that Mr. Rockefeller didn’t have:
To worry about his daughter turning herself into an unpaid prostitute, murdering his grandbaby when she forgot her ‘free’ birth control, getting AIDS from an infected boyfriend who the public was too chickensh!t to quarantine, and him being unable to stop any of it short of kidnapping her.
He also didn’t have to worry about his wife serving him divorce papers and walking off with half or more of his estate because she woke up on the wrong side of the bed even if he had been a model husband from day one.
He also didn’t have to worry about an army of dindu-nuffins burning down or looting 6 digits worth of merchandise and real estate in the space of a week and who he couldn’t expect to be arrested (or shot) in significant numbers.
He also didn’t have to worry about where the upper two-thirds of his workforce would come from - the brains of the operations like managers, engineers, accountants, etc. - because the native birthrate was in a screaming nosedive.
He also didn’t have to worry about a repeat of 9/11 on one of his skyscrapers because his nation refused to exterminate a group of barbarians barely worth calling ‘people’ even after multiple attacks on their nation.
I could go on for pages, but I’ll make myself stop here.
To: expat_panama
Today you have very rich people whining about everything like that football player who has a contract worth #106 million and he is not the best player.
To: expat_panama
#24 Yes. The family business used this in the office. I myself did not but I remember punch cards and manila cards stamped by metal plates to create records for the office files.
To: cornfedcowboy
You noticed the same thing that caught my eye as well.
38
posted on
09/14/2016 2:38:46 PM PDT
by
Pelham
(DLM. Deplorable Lives Matter)
To: expat_panama
we had one thing though...one main thing....HOPE...and throw in OPTIMISM....and add a little EXPECTATIONS....
expectations because we grew up knowing that if we studied hard, worked hard, married the right person that there was no way in hell that we weren't going to do great in life, and have lots and lots more than our parents....
I don't think today's young people for the most part, have any of those expectations...
39
posted on
09/17/2016 1:16:15 AM PDT
by
cherry
To: cherry
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