The Hockey Stick of Human Prosperity

The Hockey Stick of Human Prosperity

The Astonishing Growth of Human Prosperity

Historical Context of Human Prosperity

  • The growth in prosperity over the last few centuries is considered one of humanity's greatest achievements.
  • In 1000 BC, the average human faced poverty, hunger, and disease; this situation persisted through classical Greece and into the dark ages.

Life Expectancy and Quality of Life Improvements

  • Before the Industrial Revolution, life expectancy was around thirty years; today in the U.S., it averages about eighty years.
  • Child mortality rates have drastically improved from one in four children dying before age five to one in two hundred in developed countries.
  • Modern individuals are significantly taller due to better nutrition compared to their ancestors from 250 years ago.

Living Conditions: Then vs. Now

  • Historical living conditions were dire: ancestors lived in huts with dirt floors, infested with insects and rodents, while modern society enjoys basic amenities like electricity and running water.
  • Even those at the lower end of the economic spectrum today have access to comforts such as toilets and refrigerators that were unimaginable for past generations.

Shift in Production Knowledge

  • Prior to industrialization, people knew how to produce many items they consumed themselves (clothing, food, housing). Today’s individuals lack this knowledge for most products they use daily.
  • The complexity of modern consumption involves global supply chains where a single product may originate from multiple countries (e.g., coffee beans from Guatemala brewed using Swiss equipment).

Economic Implications of Specialization

  • The transition from self-sufficiency to specialization means individuals typically perform only one type of job while consuming a wide array of products produced by others' labor.
  • This shift prompted inquiries into economic principles; Adam Smith's work sought to understand the causes behind emerging mass prosperity during his time (1776).

Understanding Prosperity Through Trade

  • The focus has shifted from understanding what causes wealth to examining what leads to poverty.
  • Upcoming discussions will explore how trade contributes significantly to our overall prosperity within an economic framework.
Video description

In this series, Professor Don Boudreaux explores the question economists have been asking since the era of Adam Smith -- what creates wealth? On a timeline of human history, the recent rise in standards of living resembles a hockey stick -- flatlining for all of human history and then skyrocketing in just the last few centuries. Without specialization and trade, our ancient ancestors only consumed what they could make themselves. How can specialization and trade help explain the astonishing growth of productivity and output in such a short amount of time—after millennia of famine, low life expectancy, and incurable disease? What topic should we do next? http://bit.ly/1QWdvOn Next video: http://bit.ly/1Qum40J Help us caption & translate this video! http://amara.org/v/Elbp/