Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
Inspired (as I often am) by either the insights or the foolishness of a guest post at Judith Curry’s always-provocative blog, I decided to take a look at the relationship between fuel price and miles driven. My inspiration came from my amusement at the guest author’s use of the following graph to establish a relationship between fuel cost and how much people use their cars. I think a relationship exists, but the graph used by the author doesn’t show it. Figure 1 shows that graph:
Figure 1. Per capita fuel use, compared to the fuel price, for the OECD countries. SOURCE
Now, it certainly looks like there’s a clear relationship there, but that’s an illusion. My objection to the graph was, the countries divide into two groups. On the bottom right you have the European OECD countries, plus Japan. Plus one fish.
On the top left, you have the US, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. What’s not to like?
Well, ignoring fuel price for the moment, who would you think would drive more miles—a citizen of the US, or a citizen of Japan? An Aussie, or a Belgian? A Canadian, or an Italian? So all the guest author has shown in that graph is that the folks in large countries, with miles and miles between cities, drive more than Europeans and Japanese.
But of course, I couldn’t leave it there, so I linked to the following lovely graph of automobile use in the US that I ran across during my research. It shows, year by year since 1956, how many miles Americans have driven, and what the gas price was during that year.
Figure 2. Miles driven compared to the fuel price. Click to embiggen. SOURCE
Now that shows some very interesting patterns. The main oddity I noticed is that there is what might be termed a price shock effect—in the year of a big jump in prices, for example 1974, the mileage driven drops compared to the previous year. But then look what happens from 1974 to 1978 … the price stays stable, but the number of miles driven each year goes up steadily, without reversal.
But of course, I couldn’t leave it there. I digitized the data, to see what kind of relationships I could understand and reveal through further analysis. And as usual, I was surprised by what I found.
First, taking the data as it is given, there is no statistically significant relationship between the two variables, pump price and miles driven. The R2 is only 0.03. (“R2” is a measure of the relationship between two datasets, where an R2 of 1.0 indicates a perfectly linear relationship between the two, and an R2 of 0.00 indicates no relationship. So an R2 of 0.03 is … well … pathetic. So as far as a direct relationship between prices and miles driven, not happening.
Once I saw that, I wondered, well, what if I include a temporal trend in the linear regression? The way that I usually do that is simply to include the date as a variable. And to my surprise, the R2 went from 0.03 up to 0.98 … Figure 3 shows an emulation (multiple linear regression result) of the number of miles that Americans drive, versus the value estimated based on year and pump price.
Figure 3. The emulation is a multiple linear regression, using the year and the pump price as independent variables, and the actual average miles driven by Americans as the dependent variable. R2 = 0.98
Dang, sez I … that’s pretty impressive.
But of course, I couldn’t leave it there. A fixed annual increment, a simple trend like I used, is just a way to understand the data. It’s not an explanation involving some plausible mechanism. And more to the point, I also didn’t like those two years up at the top right of Figure 3, which are 2009 and 2010. In those years, Americans drove about a thousand miles less than expected. So I though about why that might be, and even a bear of little brain would go “global financial meltdown, duh”. And that made sense overall as well, because how far I drive doesn’t just depend on the pump price. It also depends in part on how much money I have in my jeans. When I’m flush I drive more, and when times get hard, I drive less regardless of the price of gas.
So I thought that instead of using the year, I’d try using the per-capita GDP as the second independent variable. Figure 4 shows those results.
Figure 4. The emulation is a multiple linear regression, using the real per capita GDP and the pump price as independent variables, and the actual average miles driven by Americans as the dependent variable. R^2 = 0.98 GDP SOURCE
Yowzah! Now that’s what I call shaving with Occam’s razor. It turns out that pump price and per capita GDP do an excellent job of estimating the number of miles driven, with very little error.
So, what does the magic equation that gives us the excellent results shown in Figure 4 say about the relationship between miles driven on the one hand, and gas price and per capita GDP on the other?
Well, it says that for every twenty-five-cent increase in the pump price of gas, Americans drive about a hundred miles less. Gas price goes up, miles driven go down. Makes sense.
And it says that for every $430 increase in per capita GDP, Americans drive about a hundred miles more. Wealth goes up, miles driven goes up. Also makes sense.
Now, the “carbon taxes” I’ve seen discussed are on the order of $20-$30 per tonne of CO2. And by coincidence, $28 per tonne of CO2 emitted is equal to twenty-five cents per gallon of gasoline. So if a $28/tonne carbon tax is imposed on gasoline, how much less might Americans drive?
Well … a hundred miles less … wow, such a stupendous gain, be still, my beating heart …
And how much actual change in our driving habits is a hundred miles less per year?
Well … since Americans drive about 10,000 miles per year, it’s a gigantic, massive reduction in miles driven of one percent.
And that, dear friends, is all the bang you get for your twenty-five-cent per gallon carbon based energy tax. A one percent reduction in miles driven. One freaking percent, and they want to impoverish the poor for that? Grrrr ….
So … what does this mean for the debate on carbon-based energy taxes?
First, it means that in the American situation, there is no way that the benefits of energy taxes are worth the cost. Why? Because the effect of a typical CO2-based energy tax on miles driven is minuscule, only a 1% reduction for a $28 per tonne of CO2 energy tax.
Next, a very slight increase in per capita GDP will nullify the energy tax entirely. Also by coincidence, it turns out that if the current per capita GDP goes up by about 1% (~$430), that will increase the mileage driven by 100 miles … so a 1% increase in per capita GDP will completely nullify a $28 per tonne of CO2 energy tax. And the GDP goes up by one percent all the time …
Next, it means that in order to have more than a one-year effect, the tax will have to continually rise.
The problem with a carbon based energy tax can be seen by thinking back to Figure 2, where I noted the “shock effect”, and how after the slight reduction in miles driven as a result of the 1974 big jump in pump price, after that one-year reduction the miles driven went right back to increasing year after year, with no change in the gas price.
So a one-time jump in the price will make little difference, just a one-year reduction in the miles driven. But by the next year or two, assuming that the per-capita GDP continues to rise as it has in the past, the miles driven will be rising again.
Next, it means that a carbon-based gasoline tax is wildly regressive. To see why, let me start with a slight digression, by bringing in a concept from accounting, that of “fixed”, “variable”, and “semi-variable” costs.
Fixed costs are those costs you can’t do anything about. The amounts are fixed, you can’t reduce them, you just have to pay them.. Maybe rent. Taxes.
Variable costs are costs that are entirely optional. Think maybe eating at restaurants. You don’t have to spend a penny on that if you don’t want to.
Semi-variable costs are costs that you can change, but you can’t eliminate entirely. These would be things like food costs. You can run them up or down, but you can’t eliminate them.
Now, think about the corresponding concepts as applied to the subject at hand—fixed, variable, and semi-variable miles driven.
Fixed miles are things like a commute to work. Short of changing your job or your residence, you can’t change that. You just rack up those miles every year.
Variable miles are things on the order of visiting Grandma in Arizona. You love to do it, but you don’t have to go.
Semi-variable miles are things like going to the post office to get your mail. You can cut the trips down, but not to zero.
What this graph shows me is that any energy tax on gasoline will hit the hardest on the poorest, the people who mostly use their car to get to work. The problem is not just that more of the wages of the poor go to energy, although that is also a problem.
But in addition to the higher percentage of their wages going to energy, the majority of their miles are fixed miles, so they can’t cut back on them. They have to drive them, so they have to pay the tax.
For the wealthy, on the other hand, lots of their miles driven are variable or semi-variable, so they can just scale down a bit. The energy tax means nothing to them. But for the poor, it can be a budget-buster.
This is one of the many reason why energy taxes are so regressive—because for the poor, fixed costs for everything squeeze them all the time, not just fixed fuel costs but also the other bills they have to pay every month. So when energy prices go up, Al Gore and James Hansen just cut back on visiting the grandchildren they love to talk about, no problem for them.
But the single mom whose gas budget barely covers getting to work, she can’t cut back on her gas use, it’s already cut to the bone. So when she pays the energy tax, she is forced to cut back on something for either the kids or herself.
And all of that for a pathetic 1% reduction in miles driven. That’s criminal.
Now please, folks, don’t insult my intelligence by claiming that it’s OK to harm the poor because of that well-worn fantasy, the fabulous claim that wealth redistribution will make it all OK. It won’t. Anyone who believes it will make it all OK has not spent enough time around government programs.
To start with, even the best-intentioned programs only reach a percentage of those most affected. Next, the poorer that people are, the less likely they are to hear about such programs. Think people living in apartments versus people living in their cars. Next, the paperwork required is all too often complex, confusing, and intrusive. Next, many of the poorest people are mistrustful of government. Also, immigrants are often equally fearful of government, and many don’t speak the language. Next, the people who end up getting the most benefits are often not those who suffered the most losses. Next, administering such a program requires a large expensive workforce of bureaucrats and paper pushers to make it function. And of course, they’re all Union, can’t be fired, plus we’ll be stuck paying these pluted bloatocrats their megabucks in retirement money ’til they shuffle off to a warmer place … and I’m not thinking Florida. Next, as with any government program, waste will consume more than you imagine. Think IRS conferences in Las Vegas and thousand dollar hammers. Next, parasitic rent-seekers like lawyers and consultants will be circling the honey-pot and making off with some of that good honey. And finally, there’s never been a government program that people didn’t scam, game, and cheat, so somewhere between a little and a lot of money will simply be stolen.
So no, wealth distribution will only make things worse, or on the best day with a following wind it might “break even” by taking from one bunch of the poor and giving to another bunch … and meanwhile the people at the bottom of the economic pile are hit the hardest. And whether you are a conservative or a liberal, that should appall you.
And finally … we’re going to create all that pain and create a giant bureaucracy and waste piles of money for a crappy 1% reduction in miles driven, a temporary reduction that will be wiped out by the next 1% increase in per capita GDP?
Really? That’s the brilliant plan? Screw the poor and the economy for a 1% reduction in miles driven?
Spare me. That’s more than foolish, that’s a crime against the indigent and everyone else in the country. Almost any other conceivable response to the imagined horrors of CO2 would be preferable. Taxes on energy are destructive and damaging to individuals, to businesses, to the environment, to the economy, and more than anything to the poor, and to turn it from mindless idiocy to criminal tragedy, there is nothing to show for it at the end of the day but a temporary 1% reduction in miles driven—from an energy tax, there’s no lasting gain, only lasting pain.
w.
DATA: The spreadsheet with the data and graphs is here.
[UPDATE] I just wondered, how much will the $28 per tonne of CO2 gasoline tax cost per year? Average fuel economy of the US fleet, cars and trucks, is about twenty mpg. Average person drives ten thousand miles, at twenty mpg that’s five hundred gallons. The tax at twenty-five cents per gallon on five hundred gallons is $125 per year.
In response to that tax, we can expect people to cut fuel use by 1%, or 5 gallons per year. Gas is around four bucks a gallon, so that’s $20 worth.
So the plan is to charge the average driver $125 per year in gas tax, and in response to that he’ll use $20 less gas, reducing his bill at the pump from $2,000 per year to $1,980 per year and cutting his CO2 emissions by a whacking great 1% … who thinks these plans up, and how can we catch them and stop them?
[UPDATE 2] I also got to wondering, just how much CO2 would a $28 per tonne of CO2 applied to gasoline consumption actually save? There’s 8.9 kg (19.6 pounds) of CO2 in a gallon of gasoline. Crazy but true, it’s the extra weight of the oxygen. So we’d be saving one whole percent of that, or .089 kg per gallon. Multiply that by the number of gallons of gasoline burned in the US, about 134E+9 gallons, and we end up with 0.01 gigatonnes (billion metric tonnes, E+9 tonnes) of CO2 saved.
And compared to a hundredth of a gigatonne, how large are the global CO2 emissions? Well, it’s about 9 gigatonnes of carbon C emitted per year, so as CO2 the mass is (16 + 16 + 12) / 12 of that to allow for the extra weight of the oxygen, or 33 gigatonnes of CO2 per year.
And the $28 carbon based energy tax would reduce that by 0.01 gigatonnes of CO2, which is a reduction of three hundredths of one percent (0.03%) … folks, have we truly gone so mad that such a trivial gain, three hundredth of one percent reduction in CO2 emissions, so small as to be absolutely unmeasurable, is used to justify this crazy tax?
John says:
July 10, 2013 at 8:17 am
….My first argument was that the size of USA doesn’t influence millage that much. Other factors like poor public transportation system, urban sprawl is reason why USA consumes much more fuel….
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You forgot a really really big reason why Australia, Canada and the USA consumes much more fuel. We GROW YOUR FOOD. The USA exports twice the food compared to the #2 food exporter.
John says:
“I didn’t know that anybody needs a car to survive. I wonder how people survived 100 years ago. ”
They survived 10 years less. If you want to jetison a few hundred years more frivolity you can shave median age back down below 50 and rescue the Social Security lockbox.
I know how sparely populated is metropolitan areas in USA. The density in Dallas could be lower than some countries in Europe. However the density has been influenced by decisions made by people in first place and only than people were influenced by the density, and it is whole my point that USA (people) have made it to like it is.
Todd Litman says:
July 10, 2013 at 12:50 pm
“A good example is the country of Norway, which is a petroleum producer, has one of the world’s highest incomes and GDPs, has a cold climate and low population density, yet maintains one of the world’s highest fuel taxes……………
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A high income and GDP doesn’t mean much when that income and GDP is taxed until you are in poverty (relatively speaking).
@Chad
Excellent comments
I’m sorry to those who believe I tried to say that they have to cycle, I just wanted them to ask why they do as they do. It is often very hard, impossible to make the change, especially to those who live in countryside, in many cases it would mean to drop the lifestyle they have and it would be bad thing as I come and still live in countryside and value such lifestyle very high.
However, what I tried to show is that not the size of USA is reason why You need to drive, most of my opponents made so many good comments why they personally can’t, if they could and it would be cheaper they would already do so. Why it is so?
The most important reason in my opinion is choice of people, often these are choices made long time ago.. There is nothing wrong to drive a car. My brother drives more than most of You and I can’t say that he wastes fuel. But in general most of societies should consume less fuel, but I can’t say it about all individuals.
Every country should decide what kind of policy it should take by them selves. I even don’t think that USA should be like Europe, not at all, however none of them should live as other lifestyle wouldn’t exist.
I just wanted to rise the discussion about the reasons, because the conclusion, in my opinion, was wrong. You should read Todd Litman comment who adds some scientific argumentation.
I personally benefited from the discussion, I hope others benefited at least a little from my opinion.
Gary Hladik says: @ur momisugly July 10, 2013 at 9:04 am
…. Unfortunately we in the US have increasingly been electing people who know what’s best for us and we’ve given them the power to make it stick. 🙁
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Actually that is not quite correct.
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From Rasmussen polls:
Or in a more indepth look at America’s Ruling Class
Yes John, we certainly have made it like it is. We are the only first world country with a birth rate that is at or above replacement levels. Why are we at or above replacement? Each family is afforded sufficient space to live as they see fit. When people are shoved into urban cores then they are not free to have the number of children they would find ideal. If you don’t like our population, fine. Should our tax rates go high enough to emulate European gasoline usage? Unless our leaders are absolute morons they should see that will lead to European style birth rates. Social safety nets cannot possibly work when there are more people using them than providing them as will likely be the case in many European and Asian countries over the next 2 decades.
I’ve recently returned to California after living in the UK for 7 years. Most of my friends there didn’t have the concept of driving for long distances unless it was on holiday to the continent. Long trips were taken on the train. I did have one friend that mostly worked from home, but would drive in to work 90 miles each way a couple of times a week. That was highly unusual. We in the US, especially the western states, have a different perception of distance. It doesn’t matter that I live only 5 miles from work, I still travel 200 miles on the weekend to visit family and friends and after living in the UK fuel is cheap!
Even with the much higher fuel costs there, driving was nearly always cheaper than taking public transportation. If you lived in London then it was pretty much insane to drive anywhere unless it was Sunday – Parking, congestion charge and traffic alone were enough to discourage most drivers. Otherwise the time and cost to commute was difficult to use as an offset for driving the car. Parking problems were usually my deciding factor. Those espousing the train as a solution must keep in mind that it will not reduce poverty, but if appropriate to the environment and culture, it can be a great thing to have.
When I lived in Chiswick and the later Ealing and commuted to lovely Slough for work (17.5 miles each way) I rode my bicycle a good deal of the time. I wouldn’t recommend it for most as, mileage aside, riding in the UK is much more dangerous than in the US. No room for cyclists and motorists don’t look out for them like they do in other European countries. Weather was always a pain with getting wet about 98% of the time and commuting in the dark for most of the year. However, I could get to work in less than an hour and it didn’t cost me anything but sweat. To take the train took me more than an hour and cost more than driving did (which could take anywhere from 20 min to 3 hours depending on traffic – usually about 35-40 min).
When I left fuel prices were outrageous at $2.50 a gallon and now they don’t seem so expensive at $4 a gallon. In the UK I was much poorer earning the equivalent amount of money. Please don’t try to foster that crap on us and let us work out our problems our way. The more socialist our government becomes the poorer we will be. I say more CO2 for everyone!
John says:
July 10, 2013 at 2:27 pm
I know how sparely populated is metropolitan areas in USA. The density in Dallas could be lower than some countries in Europe. However the density has been influenced by decisions made by people in first place and only than people were influenced by the density, and it is whole my point that USA (people) have made it to like it is.
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And the difference is that few Europeans have any choice whereas most Americans (and similar nations) do. Why are you so dense that you cannot see that we are NOT going to give up these choices voluntarily simply for some ones religious idea of “what is best for mankind”. Sounds like you are a victim of the brainwashing that I saw when in Copenhagen some decades ago. When I ask for but couldn’t get or find ice for water or anything else, the locals chastised me because they had been convinced that ice would cause stomach cancer (not pollutants because plain tap water was ok to them). Obviously the Gov had spread this rumor to save energy, naturally the elite could have all of the ice they wanted. Might explain the lack of cold beer also.
My husband informed me he just got an e-mail that one of the guys he knows was just hit and killed by an unlicensed driver (Mexican) in Durham NC. The guy was 36. (And yes you can get killed driving a car too.)
Chad B. says:
July 10, 2013 at 2:44 pm
Chad, while I agree with your point about space & family size, I disagree to the ever increasing population need mantra. It is not necessary.
Many countries have found their population balance and I find it not wrong. Considering the high taxes one pays in Europe and the inefficiencies induced by higher bureaucracy, higher costs due to “green fantasies” which do not work, or other failed fantasie projects we see that there are huge reserves which could be used to maintain a larger “older population”, if this would be needed. Especially thinking also at the ever increased productivity.
There is no need for ever increasing population levels. Social safety nets may collapse rather due to all kind of abuse.
NotAboutToChange says:
July 10, 2013 at 2:53 pm
“you are a victim of the brainwashing that I saw when in Copenhagen some decades ago. When I ask for but couldn’t get or find ice for water or anything else, the locals chastised me because they had been convinced that ice would cause stomach cancer (not pollutants because plain tap water was ok to them).”
That’s funny. That particular lie has to my knowledge never been spread in Germany. Do Danes swallow ice cubes whole?
“We are the only first world country with a birth rate that is at or above replacement levels.”
This is close to truth, but not true. Iceland have it above as well. However my objection is in a different aspect.
If You look closer to total fertility rate, You will notice that there are significant difference between groups of population. In general Hispanic population has much higher fertility rate, while white non-Hispanic Americans have it below 1.8 what is below many European countries where most of people are white, like Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Netherlands and few others (I intentionally exclude France as it have rather high percentage of migrants. No wonder it have higher total fertility rate.
Thus, You can’t argue that the lifestyle is reason of more kids. I would say that Europe has less kids because of luck of willingness to have them, not because of no possibilities to have sufficient housing.
3×2 says:
July 10, 2013 at 10:20 am
[…] This is one of the many reason why energy taxes are so regressive—because for the poor, fixed costs for everything squeeze them all the time, not just fixed fuel costs but also the other bills they have to pay every month. […]
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Lars P. says:
July 10, 2013 at 3:04 pm
” There is no need for ever increasing population levels. Social safety nets may collapse rather due to all kind of abuse.”
Please read Julian Simon’s The Ultimate Resource and find out what exactly the ultimate resource is.
http://www.juliansimon.com/writings/Ultimate_Resource/
3×2 says:
July 10, 2013 at 12:22 pm
You make an interesting point that ties in with the whole misconcept of wealth redistribution. The only redistribution that ever really occurs is from poorer to richer.
Misconception in the sense that the whole ‘wealth redistribution’ outlook relies upon the view that ‘wealth’ is a constant. The whole history of the industrial revolution proves that ‘wealth’ is not a constant….
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And recent history shows the wealth redistribution from the worker to the more wealthy is very very real.
1976 – A typical American CEO earned 36 times as much as the average worker. By 2008 average CEO pay increased to 369 times that of the average worker. (SFC, 4/29/08, p.E2)
IMF report: In the United States the share of the top 1 percent has close to tripled over the past three decades, now accounting for about 20 percent of total U.S. income
John says:
July 10, 2013 at 5:43 am
“Patrick, do You have any alternatives as effective as computer, phone, electricity, pharmaceuticals? I guess no, however commuting with car has alternatives.
It is impossible, that some can’t just accept that car riding is a cultural thing not economical.”
John thinks riding on a train is free. It is not. Here in Germany using the train (with a 50% rebate deal) costs me twice as much as the same distance (350 km) with my car. Granted, the car runs on LPG, which our stupid warmist government has given tax exemption for its planet saving properties (less C than gasoline per weight), so I’m paying half the German gasoline price.
John and some others also seem to think that once you supply a train with electricity you’re done. No, you’re not. Railway companies in Europe have about 1 employee per kilometer of track; and maintenance of railways is darn expensive. A simple level crossing sets you back 100,000 EUR I would estimate. Be prepared for frequent repairs. Trains are heavy; the vibrations destroy everything given enough time.
John says:
July 10, 2013 at 3:07 pm
“Thus, You can’t argue that the lifestyle is reason of more kids. I would say that Europe has less kids because of luck of willingness to have them, not because of no possibilities to have sufficient housing.”
Don’t you think that the “lack of willingness” and the “lifestyle” are the exact same thing?
Steve Reynolds says:
July 10, 2013 at 12:43 pm
….Of course the effect of a tax cannot be neutral for everyone, but I think the payroll tax break I suggested would actually benefit almost every low-income family with a member on a payroll…..
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Have you ever bothered to look at who pays taxes on wages???
Nearly haf of Americans do not pay income tax. CHART: Percentage of population not represented on a taxable return
This does not mean the bottom half does not pay taxes. They do but they are hidden. 151 Taxes Hidden In Loaf Of Bread
The correlation makes perfect sense. There is a fairly predictable pattern to increasing VMT’s, that is not controversial to transport economists. Trouble is the subject has been buried in ideology and activism.
The late Professor Charles Lave was a classic writer on the subject. Anti car activists always interpret rising VMT’s as “cities getting less and less efficient and people driving further and further as the city sprawls”. In fact, it is more and more people getting to drive, including the bottom income quartile, women, the elderly, and the young.
It is an absolute myth that Europeans “prefer public transport” more than Americans do. Everything IS explained by GDP per capita and the price of petrol. Eschenbach is spot on.
Europe’s cities have been de-densifying just as the USA’s have been, again with a lag due to GDP per capita and the cost of petrol. Look at authoritative density figures here:
http://www.demographia.com/db-worldua.pdf
Every city in France outside Paris, is less dense than Los Angeles. Germany, Sweden, Italy and the Netherlands all have several cities that are less dense than LA. LA is actually not really low density – it is 3 times denser than cities like Houston and Atlanta and Indianapolis and even Boston.
There are a number of factors that keep SOME rare cities “high density” in the modern era but I won’t bore everyone here with the explanation. The UK has consistently high density cities due to decades of growth containment urban planning – and this has been an absolute disaster for transport efficiency, housing affordability, social outcomes, and economic productivity.
KevinM says:
July 10, 2013 at 2:25 pm
John says:
“I didn’t know that anybody needs a car to survive. I wonder how people survived 100 years ago. ”
They survived 10 years less. If you want to jetison a few hundred years more frivolity you can shave median age back down below 50 and rescue the Social Security lockbox.
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Actually the average age was ~45 or less before 1900. link Now we are in the upper seventies.
Hi Willis,
even before you worry about the graph itself the data looks suspect. Australian price of petrol at below USD 1.00 seems way to low considering we currently pay around $1.50 AUD per liter at an exchange rate of 0.915. Our fuel price has not dropped below USD $1.00 in years.
Prof. Robert Bruegmann, one of the world’s greatest experts on cities, says the following in “Sprawl and Accessibility” (2008):
“…….contrary to what many people assume, Los Angeles has been getting denser rather than less dense for at least the past half century during an era when most people have used the automobile as their primary means of getting around. The Los Angeles urbanized
area (the census bureau’s functional definition of “urban” that includes a central city and all of the surrounding land above 1,000 people per square mile) has increased in density from barely over 4,000 people per mile to over 7,000 people per square mile, making it the densest urban area in the United States.
It is this increasing density, not sprawl, together with the fact that Los Angeles has one of the lowest provisions of freeway miles per capita in the nation, that has led to increasing traffic congestion in Los Angeles. This has happened despite the fact that Los Angeles has one of the most extensive transit systems and lowest car ownership rates in the country today.
One of the things that all of these erroneous preconceptions about sprawl demonstrate is the complexity of urban systems and the way that in these complex systems almost every cause is also an effect and vice versa. Thus, rather than say, as many people do, that the automobile was a principal cause of sprawl in the twentieth century, it
would probably be at least as accurate to say that a desire for lower density living was the reason automobile makers were able to transform themselves from a small industry turning out luxury products to an enormous industry making a product that has become a standard fixture in affluent households worldwide.
It also suggests that all transportation means are profoundly ambiguous in their
impact on the built environment. The railroad, surely a key factor in creating the dense industrial city of the nineteenth century, was also a key factor in its decentralization.
Likewise the automobile, which clearly has aided in the dispersal of cities, can also play a role in making them denser.
Curiously, as Los Angeles has become more dense over the last 50 years, the large, old cities of the American East and Europe have continued to become less dense. No large European urban area now counts even 15,000 people per square mile and many, particularly highly affluent northern European urban areas like Hamburg or Copenhagen, are now less dense than Los Angeles. With this decline in density has come a spectacular rise in automobile ownership and use. Despite draconian governmental
policies to inhibit automobile use and the expenditure of billions of dollars on public transportation, transit ridership in Europe has remained largely flat since World War II while automobile ownership and use have soared. Although many people like to observe that Europeans still drive less than Americans, in fact the upward trajectory of automobile ownership and automobile use has increased in Europe in almost exactly the same way as in the United States, simply with a time lag due to a lag in affluence…..”
https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/download/30/23