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In general, I believe the average worker today in the USA, and most of Europe is better off today than one century ago, two centuries ago, or three centuries ago.However, one concern is that not everything follows the same inflation curve. Land and housing prices often go up at 5% to 10% a year, while wages and the price of commodities increase at a much slower rate of perhaps 3% a year. Part of the increase in land values is pushed up by an increasing population, and rarity. A century and a half ago, the government could hardly give away land, especially on the frontiers. Today, that land giveaway is all but gone, and there is increasing competition for the land due to population growth.There is, of course, always the goal to get "bigger and better", but I presume if the population would stabilize, then home prices would also stabilize. But, obviously with supply and demand, anything that becomes rare with respect to demand will also cause the inflation disjoints.
So what I guess I am asking, is there a way that mathematicians can predict when an economical system becomes unstable.
The other unsustainable aspect is that things that used to be small luxuries (store bought clothes, appliances) are incredibly cheap, but big ticket items, like a university education or houses or land (which you mentioned), are becoming more and more expensive,
big ticket items, like a university education ... are becoming more and more expensive, almost out of reach for an increasing number of people.
Quote from: cheryl j on 16/10/2013 03:41:41big ticket items, like a university education ... are becoming more and more expensive, almost out of reach for an increasing number of people. Unconventional sources of education are now available from the Khan Academy, and MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses) are now available from a number of universities.At this point, it is not clear how to get a recognised certification from these institutions - or how these institutions are going to charge a reasonable fee for the course material.
We have a lot of energy reserves
I imagine that they attracted little interest from the superpowers because its not so easy to make nuclear weapons with a Thorium reactor.
Defining a sustainable fishing industry is a major political challenge in Europe at the moment.
How can economies continue to grow, given a finite supply of resources?