How Was
Life? in

1820
How was life in 1820, and how has it improved since then? What are the long-term trends in global well-being? Views on social progress since the Industrial Revolution are largely based on historical national accounting in the tradition of Kuznets and Maddison. But trends in real GDP per capita may not fully reflect changes in other dimensions of well-being such as life expectancy, education, personal security or gender inequality.
Looking at these indicators usually reveals a more equal world than the picture given by incomes alone, but has this always been the case? The report How Was Life? aims to fill this gap.
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GDP per capita
People's incomes are a fundamental measure of their material standard of living, and hence of their well-being. The best available measure of historical incomes is GDP per capita. GDP measures the value of goods and services produced in an economy in dollars of 1990, making use of Purchasing Power Parities. They are reported per person.
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Real wages
Wages are an important element of well-being capturing both a crucial dimension of job quality, and providing information on the living standards of wage earners. To measure real wages in a way that is comparable across time, the measures reported here capture the number of subsistence baskets – based on the costs of basic food products, clothing, and fuel – that an unskilled male labourer in the building industry could purchase.
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Average years of education
Education plays a key role in providing individuals with the knowledge, skills and competences needed to participate effectively in society and in the economy. It is both an element of well-being in its own right, and also an important determinant of other dimensions of well-being. Average years of education measure the number of years a person aged 15 years or over has spent in formal education (primary, secondary, or higher education).
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Life expectancy at birth
Good health contributes to well-being both directly – health is universally valued – and indirectly – as a driver of other outcomes. The standard measure of population health status is life expectancy. Life expectancy at birth, the measure used here, is the age that a child can be expected to live based on the age-specific mortality rates prevailing at the time of their birth.
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Height
People’s height while not a direct measure of well-being, provides a relatively undistorted indicator of the health and nutrition experienced by a population, in particular in their early years of life. It is therefore an important proxy of both health status and income levels, and can be used as a measure of well-being where other data may be unavailable or biased. Height is measured as the average height of the population, and is expressed in centimetres.
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Homicide rates
Personal security – the threat of violence, injury, or death – is a fundamental component of people’s well-being. Although good measures of the risk of violence are not available for long time periods (or even for much of the world in the present), the homicide rate provides a good picture of general trends in violence. Homicide rates are measured as the number of intentional deaths per 100,000 people.
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Political institutions
Political institutions determine the degree of freedom that people enjoy and their capacity to influence their social and political environment. As well as being an important driver of well-being outcomes, there is also strong evidence that people value fair and democratic processes in their own right. The Polity 2 index reported here measures the political regime of a country on a scale from +10 (fully democratic) to -10 (fully autocratic) based on the rules and competitiveness of the political process.
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CO2 emissions
Carbon dioxide emissions have little direct impact on current well-being, but are the most significant driver of climate change in the medium to long term, thus having a potentially large impact on future well-being. These emissions are, therefore, an important indicator of the sustainability of well-being over time. Carbon dioxide emissions are measured in metric tons emitted per person per year.
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SO2 emissions
Air pollution is a dimension of environmental quality that impacts directly on people's health and well-being. Sulphur dioxide emissions are associated with burning coal and crude oil, and are a direct cause of "acid rain". Emissions are measured in metric tons of sulphur dioxide emitted per person over a year.
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Biodiversity
Biodiversity is necessary to sustain the key functions of an ecosystem, and contributes to well-being directly through people’s appreciation of natural spaces. Although biodiversity cannot be directly measured for much of the past, changes in land use shape trends in biodiversity. Land use is measured as an index of Mean Species Abundance calculated from the allocation of land to crops, pasture, built up areas, and undeveloped land.
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Income inequality
Both the average level of economic resources in society and their distribution matter for well-being. Measures of income inequality provide information on how the benefits from economic growth are spread across society. Income inequality is measured by the Gini coefficient on gross household income across individuals.
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source: www.clio-infra.eu

How Was Life? presents the first systematic evidence on long-term trends in global well-being since 1820 for 25 major countries and 8 regions in the world. Issues of data quality will loom large for any historical report of such breadth and scope. While the data presented in this report draw on some of the best sources and expertise currently available to provide a consistent historical perspective, it is not meant to provide a definitive word on these issues, but rather to encourage other specialists to engage in this field.

Please note that to facilitate the understanding of the visualisation, whenever a data was missing we have used the data from the previous period.