July 23, 2013
WE PEAKED WITH THE PINTO AND THE PACER:
The Blip : What if everything we've come to think of as American is predicated on a freak coincidence of economic history? And what if that coincidence has run its course? (Benjamin Wallace-Wells, Jul 21, 2013, New York)
For all of measurable human history up until the year 1750, nothing happened that mattered. This isn't to say history was stagnant, or that life was only grim and blank, but the well-being of average people did not perceptibly improve. All of the wars, literature, love affairs, and religious schisms, the schemes for empire-making and ocean-crossing and simple profit and freedom, the entire human theater of ambition and deceit and redemption took place on a scale too small to register, too minor to much improve the lot of ordinary human beings. In England before the middle of the eighteenth century, where industrialization first began, the pace of progress was so slow that it took 350 years for a family to double its standard of living. In Sweden, during a similar 200-year period, there was essentially no improvement at all. By the middle of the eighteenth century, the state of technology and the luxury and quality of life afforded the average individual were little better than they had been two millennia earlier, in ancient Rome.Then two things happened that did matter, and they were so grand that they dwarfed everything that had come before and encompassed most everything that has come since: the first industrial revolution, beginning in 1750 or so in the north of England, and the second industrial revolution, beginning around 1870 and created mostly in this country. That the second industrial revolution happened just as the first had begun to dissipate was an incredible stroke of good luck. It meant that during the whole modern era from 1750 onward--which contains, not coincidentally, the full life span of the United States--human well-being accelerated at a rate that could barely have been contemplated before. Instead of permanent stagnation, growth became so rapid and so seemingly automatic that by the fifties and sixties the average American would roughly double his or her parents' standard of living. In the space of a single generation, for most everybody, life was getting twice as good.At some point in the late sixties or early seventies, this great acceleration began to taper off.
The awesome thing about this theory is that it requires a belief that human progress ended as the Computer/Information Age began and the USSR was hitting its high water mark. Sublime.
Posted by Orrin Judd at July 23, 2013 5:03 AM
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