41. Explanations for the post-1980s inequality rise: Autor 2014; Deaton 2013; Goldin & Katz 2010; Graham 2016; Milanović 2016; Moatsos et al. 2014; Piketty 2013; Scheidel 2017.
42. Taller elephant with lower trunk tip: Milanović 2016, fig. 1.3. More analysis of the elephant: Corlett 2016.
43. Anonymous versus nonanonymous data: Corlett 2016; Lakner & Milanović 2015.
44. Quasi-nonanonymous elephant curve: Lakner & Milanović 2015.
45. Coontz 1992/2016, pp. 30–31.
46. Rose 2016; Horwitz 2015 made a similar discovery.
47. Individuals moving into the top 1 or 10 percent: Hirschl & Rank 2015. Horwitz 2015 obtained similar results. See also Sowell 2015; Watson 2015.
48. Optimism Gap: Whitman 1998. Economic Optimism Gap: Bernanke 2016; Meyer & Sullivan 2011.
49. Roser 2016k.
50. Why the United States doesn’t have a European welfare state: Alesina, Glaeser, & Sacerdote 2001; Peterson 2015.
51. Rise in disposable income in lower quintiles: Burtless 2014.
52. Income rise from 2014 to 2015: Proctor, Semega, & Kollar 2016. Continuation in 2016: E. Levitz, “The Working Poor Got Richer in 2016,”
53. C. Jencks, “The War on Poverty: Was It Lost?”
54. 2015 and 2016 drops in the poverty rate: Proctor, Semega, & Kollar 2016; Semega, Fontenot, & Kollar 2017.
55. Henry et al. 2015.
56. Underestimating economic progress: Feldstein 2017.
57. Furman 2005.
58. Access to utilities among the poor: Greenwood, Seshadri, & Yorukoglu 2005. Ownership of appliances among the poor: US Census Bureau, “Extended Measures of Well-Being: Living Conditions in the United States, 2011,” table 1, http://www.census.gov/hhes/well-being/publications/extended-11.html. See also figure 17-3.
59. Consumption inequality: Hassett & Mathur 2012; Horwitz 2015; Meyer & Sullivan 2012.
60. Decline in happiness inequality: Stevenson & Wolfers 2008b.
61. Declining Ginis for quality of life: Deaton 2013; Rijpma 2014, p. 264; Roser 2016a, 2016n; Roser & Ortiz-Ospina 2016a; Veenhoven 2010.
62. Inequality and secular stagnation: Summers 2016.
63. The economist Douglas Irwin (2016) notes that 45 million Americans live below the poverty line, 135,000 Americans are employed by the apparel industry, and the normal turnover of jobs results in about 1.7 million layoffs a month.
64. Automation, jobs, and inequality: Brynjolfsson & McAfee 2016.
65. Economic challenges and solutions: Dobbs et al. 2016; Summers & Balls 2015.
66. S. Winship, “Inequality Is a Distraction. The Real Issue Is Growth,”
67. Governments vs. employers as social service providers: M. Lind, “Can You Have a Good Life If You Don’t Have a Good Job?”
68. Universal basic income: Bregman 2017; S. Hammond, “When the Welfare State Met the Flat Tax,”
69. Studies of the effects of basic income: Bregman 2017. High-tech volunteering: Diamandis & Kotler 2012. Effective altruism: MacAskill 2015.
CHAPTER 10: THE ENVIRONMENT
1. See Gore’s 1992
2. Quoted in M. Ridley, “Apocalypse Not: Here’s Why You Shouldn’t Worry About End Times,”
4. Extinctions and forest clearing by indigenous peoples: Asafu-Adjaye et al. 2015; Brand 2009; Burney & Flannery 2005; White 2011.
5. Wilderness preserves and decimation of indigenous peoples: Cronon 1995.
6. From
7. Brand 2009, p. 133.
8. Gifts of industrialization: chapters 5–8; A. Epstein 2014; Norberg 2016; Radelet 2015; Ridley 2010.