Ten Global Trends That Every Smart Person Needs to Know: And Many Other Trends You Will Find Interesting

Ten Global Trends That Every Smart Person Needs to Know: And Many Other Trends You Will Find Interesting

  • Downloads:7112
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-05-05 10:54:38
  • Update Date:2025-09-07
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Ronald Bailey
  • ISBN:1948647737
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

You're wrong: The world is, for the most part, not getting worse。 58 percent of folks in 17 countries surveyed in 2016 thought the world is getting worse rather than better or staying the same。 Americans were even more glum: 65 percent thought the world is getting worse and only 6 percent thought it was getting better。 The uncontroversial data on major global trends in this book will persuade you that this dark view of the prospects for humanity and the natural world is, in large part, badly mistaken。 World population will peak at 8 to 9 billion before the end of this century as the global fertility rate continues its fall from 6 children per woman in 1960 to 2。4 now。 The global absolute poverty rate has fallen from 42 percent in 1981 to 8。6 percent today。 Satellite data show that forest area has been expanding since 1982。 Natural resources are becoming ever cheaper and more abundant。 Since 1900 average life expectancy has more than doubled reaching more than 72 years。 Of course, big problems like climate change, marine plastic pollution, and declining wildlife populations are still with us, but many of these concerns are already in the process of being ameliorated as a result of the favorable economic, social, and technological trends documented here。 You can't fix what is wrong in the world, if you don't know what's actually happening。 Ten Global Trends will provide smart busy people with speedy, easily understandable, and entertaining access to surprising facts that they need to know about how the world is really faring。

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Reviews

Brian Schnack

The world is getting better — healthier, cleaner, safer, more free, and (yes) wealthier。 Read this to appreciate the amazing global trends that folks from Left to Right really don’t want you to appreciate。Here’s to humanity。

Brian

One of the most aesthetically pleasing and informative books I have ever handled。 This information-dense volume is divided into chapters by themes (Top 10, People, Health, Violence, Work, Natural Resource, Tech, and U。S。)。 Each chapter is a series of two-page spreads with a clear, cited graph on the right-hand side and a textual explanation on the left。 The data sources are consistently reputable (e。g。 World Bank, European Commission Joint Research Center, UN Food and Agriculture Organization, e One of the most aesthetically pleasing and informative books I have ever handled。 This information-dense volume is divided into chapters by themes (Top 10, People, Health, Violence, Work, Natural Resource, Tech, and U。S。)。 Each chapter is a series of two-page spreads with a clear, cited graph on the right-hand side and a textual explanation on the left。 The data sources are consistently reputable (e。g。 World Bank, European Commission Joint Research Center, UN Food and Agriculture Organization, etc。) and the trends are overwhelmingly positive。I watched David Attenborough's A Life on This Planet just before reading this book and the contrasting analysis, let alone data, could scarcely be more stark。 It is fascinating to me that a selective analysis of data can lead to drastically disparate conclusions。 Whereas Attenborough predicts that the end is neigh, Bailey suggests that life is improving in a myriad of ways。 The two don't even agree on population。 Whereas Attenborough suggests that population will keep rising and destroy the planet, Bailey provides multiple reliable sources that conservatively suggest a peaking of world population around 8。9 billion by 2060 and a decline to about 7。7 billion by 2100。 They clarify that Attenborough's numbers are based on a model that does not adequately correct for the strong, consistent decline in fertility as levels of education and prosperity rise, especially among women。Perhaps most striking is that the majority of the data presented in Ten Global Trends run counter to popular beliefs, which are based not on alarmist news headlines rather than methodical data analysis。 。。。more

Zank

Ronald Bailey always makes an eyes wide open assessment of science, technology and the state of the world。 This books is both intellectually and visually pleasing and provides great context about what's going on in the world。 Ronald Bailey always makes an eyes wide open assessment of science, technology and the state of the world。 This books is both intellectually and visually pleasing and provides great context about what's going on in the world。 。。。more

JP

In a time when so many things seem dire, it’s refreshing to see just how many important trends are improving, in the US and across the world。 This book by Cato Institute is factual, supported by research and, most notably, gorgeous。 A coffee-table book from a think tank - that too is refreshing。

Greg Mcneilly

TEN GLOBAL TENDS: Every Smart Person Should Know & many others you will find interesting | Ronald Bailey & Marian Tupy, Cato Institute, p196。"Always look on the bright side of life," is both an ironic Monty Python skit and decent life advice。 Following this quip, two researchers compiled this book: part coffee table book, part line graph porn, fully data-laden, and very optimistic。 
They argue that to fix problems, you need an accurate assessment of reality。 The news won’t provide it。 Data does。 TEN GLOBAL TENDS: Every Smart Person Should Know & many others you will find interesting | Ronald Bailey & Marian Tupy, Cato Institute, p196。"Always look on the bright side of life," is both an ironic Monty Python skit and decent life advice。 Following this quip, two researchers compiled this book: part coffee table book, part line graph porn, fully data-laden, and very optimistic。 
They argue that to fix problems, you need an accurate assessment of reality。 The news won’t provide it。 Data does。 Additionally, most people are psychologically wired to give greater importance to the negative trends than the positive ones (I certainly do)。 It's a survivor's instinct, as they say。 
These data nerds categorize reality by people, health, violence, work, natural resource, US, farm, and tech trends。 They find, in most ways, things are improving。 They start with a top 10 trend list:1。 The Great Enrichment: World GDP and wealth is booming。2。 The End of Poverty: Two hundred years ago, 84% of the world lived in poverty; today, 8。6%。3。 Resource abundance: Access to nonrenewable resources has increased。4。 We're close to peak population (maxing out @ 10 billion, circa 2070。5。 The End of Famine: Worldwide food supply is at about 2,962 calories per person per day。 6。 More Land for Nature: Since 1982, the world has added 865,000 square miles of forest; forest gains are net greater than losses。7。 Planet City: Cities tend to be hubs of innovation, and the population is concentrating in the urban landscape。 8。 Democracy on the March: Countries qualifying as full-fledged democracies rose by 49% while autocracies declined 39%。 9。 The Long Peace: Intrastate wars on declining。 10。 A Safer World: Deaths from natural disasters has plummeted。 
They have 78 trends in total。 Yes, some are worth quibbling in how they splice the data or choose a measuring stick。 But all in all, it's a robust set of concrete proofs。 Sadly, good news isn't good, clickbait。  。。。more

Aaron

Maybe the world isn't getting worse! Maybe the world isn't getting worse! 。。。more

Juan Farfán

Before this short book on progress I've read Factfulness and Enlightenment now, all them uncontroversially show with clear data that humanity has not stopped making progress in all areas since the industrial revolution。 I am more than convinced that humanity is al last heading in the right direction, the challenge of our time is to accelerate progress and keep it for all generations to come, hopefully until the end of time。 You don´t have to believe me, you just need to read this short book。 New Before this short book on progress I've read Factfulness and Enlightenment now, all them uncontroversially show with clear data that humanity has not stopped making progress in all areas since the industrial revolution。 I am more than convinced that humanity is al last heading in the right direction, the challenge of our time is to accelerate progress and keep it for all generations to come, hopefully until the end of time。 You don´t have to believe me, you just need to read this short book。 News are bad news, steady progress is not。 。。。more