Some Facts for the Day. Makes you Think !

From EcoFuture ™ "Technology is of no use to us if it is used without respect for the Earth and its processes." -Aldo Leopold
All-Consuming Passion: Waking up from the American Dream
Created by the New Road Map FoundationNorth Americans are, by many measures, the most successful people the world has ever known. Our enormously productive economy affords us luxuries beyond the wildest dreams of previous generations.
Yet amidst this affluence is evidence of a different story. Our rising standard of living has not always resulted in a higher quality of life. Indeed, in many ways there has been an erosion in our sense of well-being -- both for us as individuals and for us as a people. Our wealth has come with unforeseen costs: personal, social and environmental.
The following statistics, compiled by the New Road Map Foundation, tell the story of how our patterns of consumption affect our personal lives, the lives of other human beings and the environment. They also show the hopeful beginnings of a new frugality movement: a cultural trend toward "low-consumption, high-fulfillment" lifestyles.
The New Road Map Foundation (NRM) is dedicated to lowering consumption in North America. Their primary tool for teaching people how to painlessly consume less while increasing their quality of life is the book, Your Money or Your Life by Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin, founders of NRM. The Foundation is staffed entirely by volunteers and donates all proceeds from educational programs to projects promoting a sustainable future for our world.
References & Footnotes
Is this the American Dream?
Despite the astounding economic growth between 1958 and 1980, Americans reported feeling significantly less well-off in 1980 than they had 22 years before. [1]

Americans reporting that they were "very happy" were no more numerous in 1991 than in 1957. [2]

Percentage of 18 to 29 year-olds who think they have a very good chance of achieving "the good life": 1978: 41% 1993: 21 % [3]

Rise in per capita consumption in the U.S. in the last 20 years: 45% [4]

Decrease in quality of life in the U.S. since 1970, as measured by the index of Social Health: 51% [5]

Percentage of Americans who feel the American Dream is very much alive: 1986: 32% 1990: 23% [6]

More - is it really better?
In 1992 people were, on average, four-and-a-half times richer than their great-grandparents at the turn of the century [7]

Compared to their parents in 1950, people in the U.S. in 1991 owned twice as many cars and drove 2.5 times as far. [8]

Amount of time the average working American spent behind the wheel in 1991: 9 hours per week [9]

Increase in average daily TV viewing since 1960: 39% [10]

American parents spent 40% less time with their children in 1991 than they did in 1965. [11]

Employed Americans spent 163 hours more per year on the job in 1991 than they did in 1969. [12]

Percentage of college freshmen who reported thinking it is essential to be well off financially: 1967: 44% 1987: 76%

Percentage of college freshmen who reported thinking it is essential to develop a philosophy of life: 1967: 83% 1987: 39% [13]

Median size of a new house built in the U.S.:
1949: 1,100 sq ft [14]
1970: 1,385 sq ft [15]
1993: 2,060 sq ft [16]

Residential space per American:
1950: 312 sq ft
1993: 742 sq ft [17]
Number of Americans with two or more homes in 1991: 10 million
Number of homeless Americans in 1991: a minimum of 300,000 [16]

Shopping fever
Number of advertisements American teenagers are typically exposed to by the time they graduate from high school: 360,000 [19]

Amount of time the average American will spend watching TV commercials: one entire year of his or her life [20]

Percentage of American teenage girls who report store-hopping as favorite activity:
93% [21]

Year in which the number of shopping centers in the U.S. (32,563) surpassed the number of high schools: 1987 [22]

Average time spent shopping per week: 6 hours

Time spent playing with children per week: 40 minutes [23]
About 53% of grocery and 47% of hardware store purchases are spur of the moment. [24]

Percentage of shoppers surveyed across the country who were shopping for a specific item:
only 25% [25]

Americans can choose from: over 25,000 supermarket items 200 kinds of cereal 11,092 magazines [26]

How much we waste
The waste generated each year in the U.S. would fill a convoy of 10-ton garbage trucks 145,000 miles long -- over halfway to the moon. [27]

By the time a baby born the United States reaches age 75, he or she will have produced 52 tons of garbage, consumed 43 million gallons of water and used 3,375 barrels of oil. [28]

Proportion of houseware bought to replace worn-out items:
1981: 2/3 to 3/4
1987: less than 1/2 [29]

For packaging (cans, bottles, cartons, etc.) alone, the U.S. uses approximately:
50% of its paper
75% of its glass
40% of its aluminum
and 30% of its plastics. [30]

Amount of motor oil sent to landfills or poured down drains in the U.S. each year:
180 million gallons -- the equivalent of 16 Exxon Valdez spills. [31]

Questioning the dream
Percentage of Americans who say they have achieved the American Dream:
those earning less than $15,000 a year: 5%
those earning more than $50,000 a year: 6% [32]

Highest income group in U.S.: doctors [33]

Professions with highest proportion of unhappy people: doctors and lawyers [34]

Percentage of American workers who report feeling "used up" by the end of the workday:
42% [35]

Percentage of women who said "enough money" would persuade them to stop working permanently:
1987: 35%
1990: 56% [36] (Presumably both men and women are also interested in putting in less time and taking less money, as semi-retired people choose to do)

Percentage of Americans who would like to "slow down and live a more relaxed life": 69%

Percentage of Americans who would like a "more exciting, faster-paced life": 19% [37]

Is our dream a nightmare for others?
Percentage of the word's population comprised of Americans: 5%
Percentage of the world's resources consumed by Americans: 30% [38]

The amount of energy used by one American is equivalent to that used by:
3 Japanese
6 Mexicans
14 Chinese
38 Indians
168 Bengalis
531 Ethiopians [39]

A person in the U.S. causes 100 times more damage to the global environment than a person in a poor country. [40]

Percentage of fossil fuel used annually that is consumed by the U.S.: 25% [41]
Percentage of all humans who own a car: 8% [42]
Percentage of American households who own one or more cars: 89% [43]

Average annual income of the 3.3 billion people in the global "middle class": $700 - $7,500

Average annual income of the 1.1 billion people in the global "consumer class": over $7,500

The consumer class takes home 64% of the world's income. [44]

The average amount of pocket money for American children -- $230 a year -- is more than the total annual income of the world's half-billion poorest people. [45]

Is our dream a nightmare for the earth?
Since 1940 Americans alone have used up as large a share of the earth's mineral resources as all previous generations put together [47]

In the last 200 years the United States has lost:
50% of its wetlands
90% of its northwestern old-growth forests
99% of its tall grass prairie and up to 490 species of native plants and animals with another 9,000 now at risk [48]

Minerals due to run out in 50 years:
copper, lead, mercury, nickel, tin and zinc [49]

Portion of U.S. water pumped annually from the groundwater supply that is not renewable: one-fifth [50]

Amount of rural land in the United States turned over to development every day: 9 square miles [51]

Number of acres we blacktop each year: 1.3 million acres (equal to the state of Delaware) [52]

Number of acres of cropland we lose to erosion each year: 1 million [53]

Per capita American consumption of soft drinks in 1989: 186 quarts

Per capita American consumption of tap water in 1989: 149 quarts [54]

Total energy consumed in producing a 12-ounce can of diet soda: 2,200 Calories

Total food energy in a 12-ounce can of diet soda: 1 Calorie [55]

Within the lifetime of a child born today, virtually all of Earth's petroleum will be burned, and Earth' s fuel tank will be empty. [56]

Is our dream a nightmare for us?
Value of assets savings that today's average 50 year-old has set aside for Retirement: $2,300 [57]
Percentage of disposable personal income in U.S. allotted to savings: 1973: 8.6% [58] 1993: 4.2% [59]
Percentage of disposable income spent on personal debt payments:
1983: 8.6%
1990: 83% [60]

An American baby born in 1992 inherited a portion of the U.S. government debt equal to: $14,813. That portion continues to grow each year. [61]

Average increase in consumer spending when credit cards are used instead of cash: 23% [62]

Increase in consumer debt in the 1980s: 140% [63]

The typical American household carries $8,570 of non-mortgage personal debt. [64]

Number of individuals filing for bankruptcy in 1992: 900,000 -- triple that of 1981 [65]

New values, old habits
From a nationwide 1991 survey: [66]
8 out of 10 Americans regarded themselves as "environmentalists" and half of those said they were "strong" ones.

8 out of 10 voters said protecting the environment is generally more important than keeping prices down.

53% said it will take fundamental changes in lifestyle, rather than scientific advances, to bring about dramatic changes in the environment.

BUT ... Only 46% surveyed said they had actually bought any items based on the environmental reputation of a product or manufacturer within the last 6 months.

AND ... By 51% to 34%, voters thought the need to protect jobs in the U.S. Northwest was more important than the need to protect the endangered spotted owl, an indicator species linked to healthy forests.
FURTHER ... In 1990 American households had between 50 and 100 pounds of hazardous material that should be disposed of only through recycling or professional waste collection. In 1989, 628 communities across the U.S. had programs to collect hazardous waste.
In 1990, only 1% to 5% of the residents used these programs. [67]
Percentage of Americans in 1990 who believed that a "major national effort" was needed to improve the environment: 78%
Percentage who were actively working toward solutions: 22% [68]

How much does a good life cost?
In the state of Kerala in India, historical and cultural forces have produced a quality of life nearly equal to ours -- on a fraction of the income.
First World, Kerala, & Third World Data
Kerala
India
3rd World
Population in Millions
387
29
897
Total Fertility Rate
2.0
2.0
3.9
Quality of Life Indicators:
Infant Mortality Rate
8
17
91
Life expectancy, Male
72
70
58
Life Expectancy, Female
79
74
59
Literacy, Male
99%
94%
64%
Literacy, Female
99%
86%
39%
Resource Consumption Indicator:
GNP per capita [69]
$22,430
$365
$330

In the U.S., we use 250 gallons of oil equivalent per person, per year. Europeans use half this amount. [70]

Most Europeans produce less than half the waste per person as the average American. [71]

Possibility that all the world's people could live as Americans do: zero [46]

Number of people that the planet could support living as the Europeans do, with modest but comfortable homes, refrigeration for food, and ready access to public transit, augmented by limited auto use: everyone [72]

Dreaming a new dream
Percentage of Americans earning over $30,000 a year who said they would give up a day's pay each week for a day of free time: 70%

Percentage of Americans earning less than $20,000 a year who said they would make the same pay-for-free-time trade: 48% [73]

Percentage of workers willing to forego raises and promotions to devote more time to their families: 34% [74]

In a 1991 survey of college freshmen: [75]
Percentage saying it is "very important" or "essential" to influence social values: 43%

Percentage saying they took part in demonstrations during their last year in high school: 39%

In a Harris Poll of 1,255 adults in November 1990: 47% were spending less time shopping than five years before the poll. [76]

One of the top ten trends of 1994, according to the Trends Research Institute: voluntary simplicity [77]

Percentage of American workers ages 25 -- 49 who believe that keeping up with the Joneses does anything for the keepers-up: 2% [78]

Percentage of American workers ages 25 -- 49 who would like to see a return to a simpler society with less emphasis on material wealth: 75% [79]

Solutions
The single most important contribution any of us can make to the planet is a return to frugality. -- Robert Muller, Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations
As we've seen, unlimited consumption, once the hallmark of the American Dream, is becoming a nightmare for us, for others and for the earth. It is eroding our environmental, social and personal well-being. We are rich in things, but poor in happiness.
Our overconsumption has also weakened our economy. Leading economic observers like Peter Thurow of M.I.T., Charles Schultze of the Brookings Institute and Alfred E. Kahn of Cornell University all assert that our economic health depends on consuming less and saving more.
Every time we spend money we consume resources, so saving money links directly to saving forests, other species, mineral resources, water and ultimately the earth. For ourselves, and for all life, we must return to financial sanity.
The good news is there is a growing trend towards "fiscal fitness." Tired of debt stress and clutter, people now want more time for family, friends, fun and community service. They are discovering that a high quality of life does not depend on an ever higher material standard of living. Consuming less is becoming a path to personal freedom and social revitalization.
The folks at New Road Map Foundation have developed resources to assist people in shifting to personally, socially and environmentally sustainable lifestyles. They invite you to join them in their commitment to consume less for the sake of all life.

Second Edition, Copyright (c) 1993 New Road Map Foundation. May be reproduced freely with credit. Disclaimer: EcoFuture is in no way related to the New Roadmap Foundation (NRM). We receive no monies from NRM and do not profit from sales of these off-line resources. NRM is staffed entirely by volunteers and donates all proceeds from their educational programs to projects promoting a sustainable future for our world.
Related ResourcesA hardcopy version of All-Consuming Passion is available. A book, Your Money or Your Life (New York: Viking Penguin, 1992), by Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin offers a tested path out of excess and back to balance. The book describes a nine-step program that has helped many individuals shift to "low-consumption, high-fulfillment" lifestyles. Also see New Road Map Foundation.
Final facts:- 90% of the total electricity used by a standard incandescent lightbulb is wasted as heat.- Replacing one incandescent lightbulb with a compact flourescent bulb results in a reduction of 1,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere from power plants, over the bulb's lifetime.

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