It's conventional wisdom that the U.S. economy is built on Americans' endless appetite to buy lots of stuff.
Household consumption makes up 67% of GDP. When the economy falters, we're told spending is our patriotic duty. But it doesn't have to be this way trib.al/gIDH2vV
Suddenly, Americans can’t spend like they used to. Store shelves are emptying, and it can take months to find a car, refrigerator or sofa.
If this continues, we may need to — gasp! — live more like the Europeans. That actually might not be a bad thing trib.al/gIDH2vV
Americans haven't always acted like this.
Consumption per capita grew about 65% from 1990 to 2015, compared with about 35% growth in Europe. Household consumption makes up only about 50% of GDP in Germany trib.al/gIDH2vV
🏡 The average U.S. home was 1,700 square feet in 1980, by 2015 it was 2,000 square feet, even though the number of people in the average household shrank trib.al/gIDH2vV
📺In 1980, 15% of households didn’t have a TV, now only about 3% don’t.
📺In 2015, 40% of American households had three or more TVs, including 30% of households earning less than $40,000 a year! trib.al/gIDH2vV
In 1980, only 13% of households had 2 or more refrigerators, in 2015 30% did — including many low-earning households trib.al/gIDH2vV
🧥👖 Clothing purchases have increased five-fold since 1980 and the average garment will only be worn seven times before it's disposed of trib.al/gIDH2vV
There are many reasons America has become a nation of shopaholics:
💰We’ve become a richer country
🛍️Goods have become more accessible
⛴️We get more stuff from abroad
🏭Technology makes production more efficient
💻The internet makes it easier to shop trib.al/gIDH2vV
The pandemic revealed vulnerabilities of this hyper-efficient global market.
Ports are backed up causing shortages — for the first time in many Americans’ lives. There are reasons to believe the age of over-abundance is over trib.al/gIDH2vV
Americans tend to feed their souls by buying cheap substitutes rather than saving up for longer-lasting goods.
European souls are not necessarily more fulfilled, they just find more eco-friendly ways to shut out the darkness — like going on a bike ride trib.al/gIDH2vV
With higher prices, Americans may have to get used to consuming like Europeans.
We will certainly not be deprived, but we will trim back our excesses, perhaps be more thoughtful about what we buy and purchase fewer, higher-quality goods trib.al/gIDH2vV
What would that mean for the U.S. economy?
European consumption coexists with lower levels of growth. But that needn’t be the case. Buying smart, while maintaining an openness to new things, can be the foundation of a more sustainable and growing economy trib.al/gIDH2vV
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The total value of all cryptocurrency assets has just exceeded $3 trillion.
This means the entire crypto sector is around 20% more valuable than the equity of the two biggest tech companies -- Apple and Microsoft -- put together trib.al/VUnXork
The previous crypto bull run peaked at the end of 2017 at about $800 billion.
In 2018, crypto crashed almost 90%. But over the next three years, crypto recouped the lost ground and is back at its peak valuation compared to tech companies trib.al/p8LQVoz
One way to analyze crypto valuation is to consider the sector like a tech company.
There are thousands of ideas out there: Some are traditional services that crypto can arguably deliver cheaper and better than centralized finance, others are entirely new trib.al/p8LQVoz
In the U.S., 23% of women return to work within 10 days of giving birth, and 40% percent of maternal deaths occur in the six weeks following birth.
Paid leave can help solve the maternal mortality crisis trib.al/Nkq1Ju1
The U.S. ranks last among high-income nations in maternal mortality rates, despite spending more than $111 billion on maternal and infant health care per year.
A closer look at the data shows that Black women lead these numbers trib.al/IOXN7ph
Black women are two to three times more likely than White women to die in childbirth or from pregnancy-related complications.
Solving this crisis is essential for bringing down America’s high maternal mortality rate trib.al/IOXN7ph
💉 If only we had a vaccine for cancer, people have said. Oh, wait, we do.
And now a major study has shown just how effective it is trib.al/R1YsHor
In 2008, the U.K. began offering girls ages 12 and 13 an immunization against the human papillomavirus -- which is the cause of nearly all cervical cancer.
The vaccine was later rolled out in a catch-up program to older girls and, since 2019, to boys trib.al/OrKqUJs
The HPV vaccine had a dramatic effect on rates of cervical cancer, with an 87% reduction in those who were offered the vaccine at ages 12-13, according to data from a population-based cancer registry taken from 2006 to 2019 trib.al/OrKqUJs
Vaccine opponents are seizing on the death of former Secretary of State Colin Powell, who was fully vaccinated yet died of Covid-19 complications, to cast doubt on the vaccination effort against the virus.
These people are dangerously wrong. Here’s why: trib.al/vEstvdB
The death of someone like Powell, who was 84 and fighting multiple myeloma, a blood cancer that significantly hampers the immune system, is a potent argument to vaccinate as broadly as possible trib.al/vEstvdB
Data from the CDC makes it abundantly clear that while fully vaccinated people can contract Covid, it’s far less common.
In fact, it was six times less common than in the unvaccinated in August across all age groups trib.al/vEstvdB
Hurricane Ida put an exclamation point on realities that New York was already grappling with.
Like other parts of the world, the city is confronting more than calamitous extreme events. It’s the drip, drip of “the chronic worsening of average conditions” trib.al/JgcjfKN
The NYC Stormwater Resiliency Plan says that weatherwise, the scale of everything has changed.
The city’s current infrastructure — its roads, subway tunnels, sewer systems, storm drains — isn't built to withstand the climate-related ravages to come trib.al/JgcjfKN