Bernstein first addresses the progression of material improvement. He argues that for most human history the average person never improved their material income. About two hundred years ago, the shift began and humans began to improve their material well being by about 2% each year. In the article, Bernstein discusses the psychological affects of the shift specifically in regards to the importance of private property to the individual human being.
1 comment:
This article, like the book Freakonomics, takes a complex topic and simplifies it very nicely. I especially enjoyed the part about a wealthy man is one who makes more then his brother. It is often overlooked that even though the "have-nots" have more today then they did in the 1900s they are still "have-nots", and this article really showed that income inequality is a big deal.
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