Explain xkcd: It's 'cause you're dumb.
- Here below are five sections with tables listing the prices of several items in 980: Money.
- This is still work in progress.
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This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: 'So disorganized. If you can organize this, please do. Many items are missing from the Billions and Trillions sections. Also we need someone to double-check the values, please. If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks.
|
Dollars
Category
|
Item
|
Price
|
Dollar bills
|
$1 Bill
|
$1
|
$10 Bill
|
$10
|
$500 Bill (William McKinley, discontinued)
|
$500
|
$1000 Bill (Grover Cleveland, discontinued)
|
$1000
|
Fruit
|
Apples (one dozen)
|
$5.68
|
Oranges (one dozen)
|
$3.08
|
Fast Food
|
Dollar menu item
|
$1.00
|
Starbucks Coffee
|
$2.00
|
Average US Restaurant Meals
|
Average single US restaurant meal
|
$35.65
|
Average meal at the 20 costliest San Francisco restaurants
|
$85.27
|
Dinner for four
|
Homemade rice and pinto beans
|
$9.26 (With time cost of two hours of shopping, travel, prep and cleanup: $41.80)
|
Homemade chicken dinner
|
$13.78 (With time cost of two hours of shopping, travel, prep and cleanup: $46.32)
|
McDonalds
|
$27.89 (With time cost of 30 minutes travel: $36.03)
|
Arby’s
|
$34.00 (With time cost of 30 minutes travel: $42.13)
|
Chili’s
|
$69.64 (With time cost of 30 minutes travel: $77.78)
|
Outback Steakhouse
|
$109.82 (With time cost of 30 minutes travel: $117.96)
|
Vehicles
|
Low-end bicycle
|
$190
|
Clothes
|
Men's suit
|
$400
|
Debt
|
Daily interest on average credit card debt
|
$5.63
|
Daily income
|
Median household daily income
|
$136.28
|
Taxes
|
$32.16
|
After-tax
|
$104.12
|
Game Consoles
|
PS3
|
$250
|
Xbox 360
|
$200
|
Wii
|
$150
|
Electronics
|
Kindle Fire
|
$199
|
Basic iPad
|
$499
|
iPad + 3G + a year of data
|
$869
|
Basic Macbook Air
|
$999
|
Netbook
|
$249.99
|
iPod Nano
|
$129
|
Mac Mini
|
$599
|
Comcast cable internet for a year ($59.99/month) |
$719.88
|
Books
|
Paperback book
|
$6.80
|
Hardcover book
|
$32.27
|
Audio book
|
$50.42
|
Kindle
|
$79.00
|
New video game
|
$49.99
|
Kindle keyboard + 3G
|
$139
|
Loose change
|
Loose change per pound
|
$12.80
|
Loose change with no quarters
|
$5.40
|
One-gallon jug of loose change
|
$270
|
Loose change with no pennies
|
$17.40
|
Annual value of pennies received in change (at one daily cash purchase)
|
$7.30
|
Pet ownership (Based on ASPCA estimations)
|
Annual cost of rabbit ownership
|
$730
|
Annual cost of dog ownership
|
$695
|
Annual cost of cat ownership
|
$670
|
Annual cost of fish ownership
|
$35
|
Annual cost of bird ownership
|
$200
|
Annual cost of small mammal ownership
|
$300
|
Cell phone bill
|
Traditional cell phone average annual bill
|
$928.30
|
Smartphone average annual bill
|
$1,320
|
Worker/CEO comparison
|
1965 production worker average hourly wage
|
$19.61
|
2007 production worker average hourly wage
|
$19.71
|
Typical 1965 CEO pay for the same period
|
$490.31
|
Typical 2007 CEO pay for the same period
|
$5419.97
|
Thousands
Category
|
Item
|
Price
|
Typical household net worth by head of household’s age in 1984
|
<35 years
|
$11,680
|
35-44 years
|
$72,090
|
45-54 years
|
$115,060
|
55-64 years
|
$149,240
|
>65 years
|
$122,100
|
Typical household net worth by head of household’s age in 2009
|
<35 years
|
$3,710
|
35-44 years
|
$40,140
|
45-54 years
|
$103,040
|
55-64 years
|
$164,270
|
>65 years
|
$172,820
|
Raising a child to age 17
|
Upper income
|
$302,860
|
Middle income
|
$206,920
|
Lower income
|
$150,380
|
Vacations
|
All-inclusive one-week trip for two to St. Lucia resort from New England (incl. flights)
|
$3,204
|
Twenty week-long Hawaiian vacations
|
$136,020
|
Typical week-long Hawaii trip for two from US West Coast (incl. flights)
|
$6,801
|
Typical weekend Hawaii trip for two from US West Coast incl. flights)
|
$2,863
|
School Prices
|
Estimated one-year Hogwarts cost (incl. tuition)
|
$43,000
|
Seven-year Hogwarts degree
|
$301,000
|
Average community college tuition
|
$10,340 (One year $2,580)
|
Average in-state university tuition
|
$28,920 (One year $7,230)
|
Income per capita (2005)
|
United States 2005 per capita income
|
$32,360
|
Switzerland 2005 per capita income
|
$29,910
|
Germany 2005 per capita income
|
$27,550
|
UK 2005 per capita income
|
$23,240
|
France 2005 per capita income
|
$16,400
|
China 2005 per capita income
|
$3,540
|
Brazil 2005 per capita income
|
$5,540
|
Houses
|
Small rural house
|
$100,000
|
Typical new home
|
$224,910
|
Health
|
Average individual health insurance annual premium
|
$5,430
|
Cancer treatment including chemo
|
$117,260
|
Annual Household Costs
|
A daily pack of cigarettes for a year (NJ)
|
$3,050
|
One Starbucks latte per day
|
$1,820
|
Average smartphone annual cost
|
$1,320
|
Annual cost of car ownership
|
$3,650
|
Typical annual household spending
|
$5,650
|
Average household CC debt
|
$9,960
|
Annual cost to carry that debt
|
$2,090
|
Typical annual housing costs
|
NYC
|
$25,416
|
San Francisco
|
$21,888
|
Boston
|
$18,216
|
Los Angeles
|
$17,640
|
Washington DC
|
$16,380
|
Chicago
|
$13,664
|
Worcester
|
$12,456
|
Houston
|
$11,888
|
Minneapolis
|
$10,908
|
Detroit
|
$10,080
|
Salt Lake City
|
$9,108
|
Scranton
|
$8,604
|
Prince William and Kate Middleton's Wedding
|
Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding cake
|
$78,000
|
Kate Middleton's wedding dress
|
$350,000
|
Flower cost for Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding
|
$800,000
|
Value of an investment of $1,000/year
(NOT accounting for inflation) for 30 years with 5% annual interest
|
1 year
|
$1,000
|
5 years
|
$5,526
|
10 years
|
$12,850
|
15 years
|
$21,580
|
20 years
|
$33,070
|
25 years
|
$47,730
|
30 years
|
$66,440
|
30 years ($30,000 saved in mattress)
|
$30,000
|
30 years ($1,000/yr at 4% real return (long-term stock + divident average)
|
$56,080
|
Value of investment (accounting for inflation)
|
30 years
|
$27,370
|
30 years ($30,000 saved in mattress)
|
$12,360
|
Average Vehicle Costs
|
Average used car
|
$8,910
|
Average new car
|
$27,230
|
High-end bicycle
|
$1,500
|
Total cost to buy and own selected vehicles for five years
|
Honda Insight
|
$27,874
|
Toyota Prius
|
$38,771
|
Jeep Patriot
|
$35,425
|
Honda Fit
|
$28,745
|
BMW Z4
|
$61,312
|
Ford Explorer
|
$45,524
|
Toyota Camry
|
$34,697
|
smart fortwo
|
$29,629
|
Honda CR-V
|
$35,183
|
Chevy Volt
|
$42,180
|
Hyundai Sonata
|
$34,644
|
Ford F-150
|
$48,734
|
Nissan Cube
|
$29,383
|
Porsche 911
|
$91,590
|
Total cost to buy and own selected vehicles for five years if gas were $10/gallon
|
Toyota Prius
|
$48,990
|
Honda Fit
|
$45,233
|
Ford Explorer
|
$69,076
|
smart fortwo
|
$45,058
|
Chevy Volt
|
$50,612
|
Ford F-150
|
$77,111
|
Typical annual household income
|
Bottom 20%
|
$10,200
|
Second 20%
|
$24,800
|
Middle 20%
|
$44,400
|
Fourth 20%
|
$76,100
|
Top 10%
|
$201,100
|
Top 1%
|
$822,000
|
Top 1/500th
|
$2,080,000
|
Median US household income
|
Median US household income
|
$51,570
|
After-tax
|
$39,170
|
Taxes
|
$12,100
|
Total lifetime income from ages 25-65 at $50,000/year after 25% taxes (including Social Security)
|
$1,500,000
|
Cost per household served by US Rural Utilities Service program to expand broadband access
|
$359,790
|
If I had $1000000 (Cost of the items the singer in "If I had $1000000" would buy in order to win your love: $263,330)
|
Furniture
|
$21,160
|
Plymouth Reliant
|
$3,000
|
Tree fort
|
$15,000
|
Llama
|
$2,120
|
Joseph Merrick's remains
|
N/A (Held in Royal London Hospital collection and not available for purchase)
|
House
|
$224,820
|
Tiny fridge
|
$99.08
|
Gourmet pre-wrapped sausages (2)
|
$34.48
|
Kraft Dinner (two double servings)
|
$3.06
|
Expensive ketchup
|
$10.75
|
Faux fur coat
|
$198.00
|
Limo ride to the store
|
$186.59
|
Luxuries
|
Golden Opulence ice cream sundae
|
$1,000
|
Waist deep half-room ball pit
|
$2,400
|
All 30 bestselling game consoles (refurb, eBay)
|
$2,640
|
Initial seat on Virgin Galactic suborbital flight
|
$200,000
|
Video Games
|
Typing F-U-N-D-S
|
$10,000
|
Daily sales of Minecraft
|
$193,500
|
Millions
Category
|
Item
|
Price
|
Dr. Evil
|
Amount Dr. Evil thought he was demanding from the 1997 world
|
$6,630,000
|
Amount he was actually demanding
|
$1,380,000
|
William and Kate's wedding
|
Flowers
|
$800,000
|
Security
|
$20,000,000
|
Total cost
|
$80,000,000
|
$50000 salary for 40 years after 25% taxes
|
50,000 salary for 40 years after 25% taxes
|
$1,500,000
|
Lifetime cost to avoid changing your oil by abandoning your car and buying a new one whenever you hit 5.000 miles
|
$3,270,000
|
Rare Items
Thing |
Price
|
Qianlong Chinese vase sold in 2010 |
$83,710,000
|
Leonardo’s Codex Leicester (bought by Bill Gates) |
$45,930,000
|
Estimated value of first-edition Gutenberg Bible |
$34,610,000
|
Double Eagle coin (All destroyed uncirculated save a few stolen from the US Mint) |
$9,330,000
|
Treskilling Yellow postage stamp (At $50 billion/lb possibly the world’s most expensive thing by weight) |
$2,780,000
|
1297 Magna Carta original copy signed by Edward I |
$21,890,000
|
Painting from The Card Players series (rumor) |
$250,000,000
|
Willem de Kooning’s “Woman III” (2006 auction) |
$168,780,000
|
Jackson Pollock’s “No. 5, 1948” (2006 auction) |
$153,440,000
|
Airbus A380 |
$264,000,000
|
Mona Lisa assessed value |
$730,660,000
|
Prizes
Amount |
Year |
Show/Movie |
Amount Today
|
$64,000
|
1955
|
The $64,000 Question
|
$528,310
|
£1,000,000
|
1998
|
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (UK)
|
$2,270,000
|
$1,000,000
|
1999
|
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (USA)
|
$1,330,000
|
$1,000,000
|
1955
|
The Millionaire (TV Show)
|
$8,250,000
|
$1,000,000
|
1931
|
The Millionaire (Movie)
|
$14,530,000
|
Bitcoins
Thing |
Price
|
Market value of all Bitcoins as of 11/2011 |
$22,819,797
|
Market value of all Bitcoins as at July 2011 peak price |
$210,000,000
|
Elections
Person |
Funds raised
|
2012 presidential fundraising |
$188,260,000
|
Herman Cain |
$5,380,000
|
Jon Huntsman |
$4,510,000
|
Michele Bachmann |
$9,870,000
|
Ron Paul |
$12,790,000
|
Rick Perry |
$17,200,000
|
Mitt Romney |
$32,610,000
|
Barack Obama |
$88,420,000
|
Other |
$17,480,000
|
Person |
Funds raised
|
2008 presidential campaign fundraising |
$1,860,390,000
|
Excluding candidate Lee L. Mercer, Jr of Houston, who claimed, in his combined FEC filings, |
$900,005,507 in fundraising and $900,006,431 in campaign spending.
|
Ron Paul |
$32,480,000
|
John Edwards |
$64,410,000
|
Rudy Giuliani |
$66,520,000
|
Mitt Romney |
$116,730,000
|
Barack Obama |
$799,670,000
|
John McCain |
$394,280,000
|
Hilary Clinton |
$259,050,000
|
Other |
$127,250,000
|
Person |
Funds raised
|
2004 presidential campaign fundraising |
$1,006,810,000
|
Howard Dean |
$61,620,000
|
Wesley Clark |
$34,620,000
|
John Edwards |
$39,310,000
|
John Kerry |
$352,090,000
|
George W. Bush |
$429,660,000
|
Other |
$89,510,000
|
Person |
Funds raised
|
2000 presidential campaign fundraising |
$805,120,000
|
Pat Buchanan |
$37,440,000
|
John McCain |
$75,180,000
|
Bill Bradley |
$65,680,000
|
Steve Forbes |
$114,400,000 *The Money Chart incorrectly reads $11,440,000
|
Al Gore |
$170,520,000
|
George W. Bush |
$247,100,000
|
Other |
$94,800,000
|
2010 midterm elections fundraising
Party |
Funds raised
|
Democrats |
$815,000,000
|
Republicans |
$587,000,000
|
2011-2012 Campaign donations by industry
Party |
Funds donated
|
To Other |
$16,000,000 approximately
|
To Democrats |
$146,000,000 approximately
|
To Republicans |
$145,000,000 approximately
|
Party |
Funds donated
|
Finance industry |
$122,900,000
|
Organized labor |
$18,720,000
|
Energy industry |
$26,680,000
|
Lawyers and general lobbyists |
$57,590,000
|
Health industry |
$42,727,000
|
Electronics and communication industry |
$32,420,000
|
Inaugurations
Thing |
Price
|
Barack Obama’s 2009 inauguration |
$174,100,000
|
Festivities (private donors) |
$46,400,000
|
Federal + state + local government (mainly security) |
$127,700,000
|
Thing |
Price
|
George Bush’s 2005 inauguration |
$178,600,000
|
Festivities (private donors) |
$47,800,000
|
Federal + state + local government (mainly security) |
$130,800,000
|
Past presidential campaign fundraising
Campaign Year |
Funds raised
|
1996 |
$559,810,000
|
1992 |
$521,480,000
|
1988 |
$606,300,000
|
1984 |
$429,860,000
|
1980 |
$434,220,000
|
1976 |
$664,160,000
|
Millionaires
Item |
Price
|
Darell Issa (R-CA) net worth |
$304,000,000
|
Jane Harman (D-CA) net worth |
$294,000,000
|
John Kerry (D-MA) net worth |
$239,000,000
|
Mitt Romney net worth |
$210,000,000
|
Jon Huntsmann net worth |
$40,000,000
|
Average net worth of US senator |
$13,400,000
|
Average net worth of US representative |
$4,900,000
|
A billionare |
$1,000,000,000
|
Value of a solid gold toilet (626 lbs) by year
Year |
Value (Approximate)
|
1967 |
$2,000,000
|
1968 |
$2,000,000
|
1969 |
$2,000,000
|
1970 |
$2,000,000
|
1971 |
$2,000,000
|
1972 |
$3,000,000
|
1973 |
$4,000,000
|
1974 |
$7,000,000
|
1975 |
$6,000,000
|
1976 |
$4,000,000
|
1977 |
$5,000,000
|
1978 |
$6,000,000
|
1979 |
$9,000,000
|
1980 |
$15,000,000
|
1981 |
$10,000,000
|
1982 |
$8,000,000
|
1983 |
$9,000,000
|
1984 |
$7,000,000
|
1985 |
$6,000,000
|
1986 |
$7,000,000
|
1987 |
$8,000,000
|
1988 |
$7,000,000
|
1989 |
$6,000,000
|
1990 |
$6,000,000
|
1991 |
$5,000,000
|
1992 |
$5,000,000
|
1993 |
$5,000,000
|
1994 |
$5,000,000
|
1995 |
$5,000,000
|
1996 |
$5,000,000
|
1997 |
$4,000,000
|
1998 |
$4,000,000
|
1999 |
$3,000,000
|
2000 |
$3,000,000
|
2001 |
$3,000,000
|
2002 |
$3,000,000
|
2003 |
$4,000,000
|
2004 |
$4,000,000
|
2005 |
$5,000,000
|
2006 |
$6,000,000
|
2007 |
$8,000,000
|
2008 |
$8,000,000
|
2009 |
$10,000,000
|
2010 |
$13,000,000
|
2011 |
$15,000,000
|
Value of a carry-on suitcase full of $100 bills (30,00 ct, 60lbs)
Year |
Value (Approximate)
|
1967 |
$20,000,000
|
1968 |
$19,000,000
|
1969 |
$18,000,000
|
1970 |
$17,000,000
|
1971 |
$16,000,000
|
1972 |
$16,000,000
|
1973 |
$15,000,000
|
1974 |
$13,000,000
|
1975 |
$12,000,000
|
1976 |
$12,000,000
|
1977 |
$11,000,000
|
1978 |
$10,000,000
|
1979 |
$9,000,000
|
1980 |
$8,000,000
|
1981 |
$7,000,000
|
1982 |
$7,000,000
|
1983 |
$7,000,000
|
1984 |
$6,000,000
|
1985 |
$6,000,000
|
1986 |
$6,000,000
|
1987 |
$6,000,000
|
1988 |
$6,000,000
|
1989 |
$5,000,000
|
1990 |
$5,000,000
|
1991 |
$5,000,000
|
1992 |
$5,000,000
|
1993 |
$5,000,000
|
1994 |
$4,000,000
|
1995 |
$4,000,000
|
1996 |
$4,000,000
|
1997 |
$4,000,000
|
1998 |
$4,000,000
|
1999 |
$4,000,000
|
2000 |
$4,000,000
|
2001 |
$4,000,000
|
2002 |
$4,000,000
|
2003 |
$4,000,000
|
2004 |
$4,000,000
|
2005 |
$3,000,000
|
2006 |
$3,000,000
|
2007 |
$3,000,000
|
2008 |
$3,000,000
|
2009 |
$3,000,000
|
2010 |
$3,000,000
|
2011 |
$3,000,000
|
Per US resident
Item |
Value
|
$1 per US resident |
$312,620,000
|
$1 per US household |
$117,290,000
|
$10 from every US resident |
$3,326,200,000
|
$10 from every US household |
$1,179,180,000
|
Amount needed to live comfortably off investments |
$4,090,000
|
EPA value of a human life |
$8,120,000
|
Six Million Dollar Man (2011 dollars) |
$29,870,000
|
Raptors
Item |
Price |
Notes
|
One F-22 raptor |
$154,500,000 |
|
One velociraptor |
$1,930,000 |
(25% of Jurassic Park production budget amortized over three velociraptors)
|
Professional rapper net worth
Rapper |
Net worth
|
50 Cent |
$100,000,000
|
50 Cent (stage name) |
$0.50
|
50 Cent (adjusted for inflation) |
$0.70
|
Birdman |
$100,000,000
|
Dr Dre |
$125,000,000
|
Jay-Z |
$450,000,000
|
Diddy |
$475,000,000
|
J.K. Rowling
Item |
Value |
Notes
|
J.K. Rowling |
$1,000,000,000 |
|
J. K. Rowling had she become a rapper |
$82,000 |
Professional assessment by rapper/geek culture expert MC Frontalot
|
Annual hurricane forecast R&D funding
Item |
Price
|
Annual hurricane forecast R&D funding |
$20,000,000
|
Hurricane forecast improvement funding since 1989 |
$440,000,000
|
Economic savings--during Hurricane Irene alone--due to limiting evacuations made possible by recent forecast advances |
$700,000,000
|
Corporation Expenses
Item |
Price
|
30-second Super Bowl ad slot |
$3,000,000
|
Annual cost to run Wikipedia |
$18,500,000
|
Loss in NewsCorp value over hacking scandal |
$750,000,000
|
Vehicles
Item |
Price
|
Most expensive production car (Bugatti Veyron) |
$2,400,000
|
Most expensive car ever sold (1957 Ferrari 250) |
$16,390,000
|
Marginal cost to launch one shuttle |
$450,000,000
|
Total shuttle program per launch |
$1,451,000,000
|
One B-2 bomber |
$2,500,000,000
|
Structures
Item |
Price
|
Large city office building |
$100,000,000
|
Dubai Fountain |
$224,540,000
|
Burj Khalifa |
$1,521,000,000
|
New Yankee Stadium |
$1,545,000,000
|
Video Games
Item |
Price
|
Minecraft sales by October 2011 |
$56,780,000
|
Billions
Harry Potter movie franchise total revenue
Item |
Value
|
Harry Potter movie franchise total revenue |
$21,000,000,000
|
Treasure found in a temple in India in 2011 |
$22,000,000,000
|
Box office revenue
Adjusted for monetary inflation but not ticket price inflation
Hilighted [sic]: films that earned more than 2009's Avatar
Year |
Movie |
Revenue |
Highlighted
|
2009 |
Avatar |
$783,510,000 |
|
2008 |
The Dark Knight |
$547,520,000 |
|
2003 |
Shrek 3 |
$516,610,000 |
|
1999 |
The Phantom Menace |
$572,000,000 |
|
1997 |
Titanic |
$827,260,000 |
Yes
|
1994 |
Lion King |
$625,810,000 |
|
1993 |
Jurassic Park |
$625,810,000 |
|
1984 |
Ghostbusters |
$507,720,000 |
|
1983 |
Return of the Jedi |
$686,710,000 |
|
1982 |
E.T. |
$996,580,000 |
Yes
|
1980 |
The Empire Strikes Back |
$778,530,000 |
|
1977 |
Star Wars |
$1,681,000,000 |
Yes
|
1975 |
Jaws |
$1,067,510,000 |
Yes
|
1973 |
The Exorcist |
$1,019,000,000 |
Yes
|
1965 |
The Sound of Music |
$1,144,920,000 |
Yes
|
1962 |
101 Dalmatians |
$1,131,310,000 |
Yes
|
1960 |
Ben-Hur |
$561,090,000 |
|
1957 |
The Ten Commandments |
$532,570,000 |
|
1943 |
Bambi |
$1,391,000,000 |
Yes
|
1942 |
Fantasia |
$1,146,000,000 |
Yes
|
1940 |
Gone with the Wind |
$3,157,000,000 |
Yes
|
1938 |
Snow White |
$2,841,700,000 |
Yes
|
Charity
Area |
Amount given
|
US annual charitable giving |
$294,850,000,000
|
To religious organizations |
$102,000,000,000
|
To educational organizations |
$42,240,000,000
|
To foundations |
$33,450,000,000
|
To human services |
$26,850,000,000
|
To societal benefit organizations |
$24,570,000,000
|
To health organizations |
$23,140,000,000
|
To international affairs |
$15,980,000,000
|
To arts and culture |
$13,460,000,000
|
To animals and environment |
$6,750,000,000
|
Type of giving:
Type |
Amount given
|
Individual giving |
$214,650,000,000
|
Foundation grantmaking |
$41,560,000,000
|
Bequests |
$23,140,000,000
|
Corporate giving |
$15,500,000,000
|
Gates Foundation total giving since 1994
Area |
Amount given
|
Gates Foundation total giving since 1994 |
$25,360,000,000
|
Global health |
~12B
|
US |
~4B
|
Developments |
~3B
|
Grants |
~1B
|
Book publishing industry revenue
Genre |
Revenue
|
Book publishing industry revenue |
$28,320,000,000
|
Romance |
$1,380,000,000
|
Trade books |
$14,130,000,000
|
K-12 |
$5,570,000,000
|
Professional |
$3,750,000,000
|
Higher education |
$4,560,000,000
|
Video game industry revenue
Area |
Revenue
|
Video game industry revenue |
$48,900,000,000
|
United States |
$18,830,000,000
|
Education
Item |
Value |
Notes
|
Student loans outstanding |
$955,800,000,000 |
|
Federal student loans |
$792,900,000,000 |
|
Defaulted Federal student loans |
$65,020,000,000 |
Private total unknown
|
Private student loans |
$163,900,000,000 |
|
Total spending on primary and secondary education in the US |
$612,470,000,000 |
|
Teacher Salaries |
$295,810,000,000 |
|
Total annual higher education spending in the US |
$355,110,000,000 |
|
Harvard University revenue
Area |
Revenue
|
Tuition, donations, and fees |
$1,425,000,000
|
Investments |
$7,900,000,000
|
In other words, if Harvard completely eliminated tuition, it would mean roughly a 15% budget cut.
Education foundations
Foundation |
Amount given
|
Gates Foundation |
$36,700,000,000
|
INGKA Foundation |
$36,000,000,000
|
Howard Hughes Medical Institute |
$14,800,000,000
|
Ford Foundation |
$13,800,000,000
|
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation |
$6,100,000,000
|
Endowments of the 63 wealthiest universities
University |
Endowments
|
Endowments of the 63 wealthiest universities |
$277,570,000,000
|
Harvard |
$32,000,000,000
|
Yale |
$19,400,000,000
|
Princeton |
$17,100,000,000
|
U of Texas |
$16,610,000,000
|
Stanford |
$16,500,000,000
|
MIT |
$9,900,000,000
|
Columbia |
$7,800,000,000
|
U of Michigan |
$7,800,000,000
|
Texas A&M |
$7,030,000,000
|
Northwestern |
$7,030,000,000
|
Corporate revenue
Corporation |
Revenue |
Profit |
Loss
|
Walmart |
$421,800,000,000 |
$16,390,000,000 |
|
ExxonMobil |
$354,700,000,000 |
$30,460,000,000 |
|
Chevron |
$196,300,000,000 |
$19,020,000,000 |
|
Fannie Mae |
$153,800,000,000 |
|
$14,010,000,000
|
GE |
$151,600,000,000 |
$11,640,000,000 |
|
Berkshire Hathaway |
$136,100,000,000 |
$12,970,000,000 |
|
PepsiCo |
$57,840,000,000 |
$6,320,000,000 |
|
Coca-Cola |
$35,840,000,000 |
$11,800,000,000 |
|
VISA |
$8,100,000,000 |
$2,700,000,000 |
|
MasterCard |
$5,500,000,000 |
$1,850,000,000 |
|
General Motors |
$135,600,000,000 |
$6,170,000,000 |
|
Ford |
$129,000,000,000 |
$6,560,000,000 |
|
Chrysler |
$44,950,000,000 |
|
$653,000,000
|
AT&T |
$124,600,000,000 |
$19,860,000,000 |
|
Verizon |
$106,560,000,000 |
$2,550,000,000 |
|
Bank of America |
$134,20,000,000 |
|
$2,240,000,000
|
JP Morgan Chase |
$115,480,000,000 |
$17,370,000,000 |
|
Citigroup |
$111,060,000,000 |
$10,600,000,000 |
|
AGI |
$104,420,000,000 |
$17,370,000,000 |
|
HP |
$126,000,000,000 |
$8,780,000,000 |
|
Apple |
$65,230,000,000 |
$14,010,000,000 |
|
Microsoft |
$62,480,000,000 |
$18,760,000,000 |
|
Google |
$29,320,000,000 |
$8,510,000,000 |
|
Combined annual profit of the Fortune 500 companies |
|
$708,600,000,000 |
|
US health care spending
Total annual tax breaks to the five largest oil companies
US GDP
Combined economic value of all goods and services produced in a year
Item |
Value
|
US GDP |
$14,545,950,000,000
|
Government |
$1,980,640,000,000
|
Real estate |
$1,925,210,000,000
|
Non-rental Real estate |
$1,737,500,000,000
|
Rental and leasing |
$187,610,000,000
|
Nondurable goods |
$739,300,000,000
|
Food, beverage, and tobacco |
$212,330,000,000
|
Chemicals |
$223,050,000,000
|
Petroleum and coal |
$123,630,000,000
|
Apparel |
$12,050,000,000
|
Paper products |
$57,800,000,000
|
Plastics and rubber products |
$58,410,000,000
|
Textile mills |
$18,130,000,000
|
Printing and related supports |
$33,790,000,000
|
Durable goods |
$898,420,000,000
|
Computers and electronics |
$212,640,000,000
|
Metal products |
$125,590,000,000
|
Machinery |
$116,110,000,000
|
Wood products |
$21,530,000,000
|
Furniture |
$24,930,000,000
|
Motor vehicles, trailers, and parts |
$80,560,000,000
|
Other transportation equipment |
$93,440,000,000
|
Mineral products |
$39,360,000,000
|
Metals |
$44,710,000,000
|
Electrical equipment and components |
$53,260,000,000
|
Miscellaneous |
$81,390,000,000
|
Finance and insurance |
$1,207,030,000,000
|
Federal Reserve banks and credit intermediaries |
$529,540,000,000
|
Insurance |
$437,340,000,000
|
Investments |
$180,500,000,000
|
Funds and trusts |
$59,550,000,000
|
Professional and business services |
$1,752,750,000,000
|
Waste management |
$39,870,000,000
|
Administrative and support services |
$358,110,000,000
|
Legal services |
$225,830,000,000
|
Computer systems design and service |
$174,730,000,000
|
Corporate management |
$253,950,000,000
|
Other professional or technical services |
$700,250,000,000
|
Health and education |
$1,294,580,000,000
|
Social assistance |
$93,750,000,000
|
Ambulatory health care services |
$529,750,000,000
|
Hospitals |
$466,390,000,000
|
Educational services |
$159,580,000,000
|
Utilities |
$276,210,000,000
|
Other services |
$345,540,000,000
|
Construction |
$553,750,000,000
|
Retail trade |
$844,380,000,000
|
Wholesale trade |
$804,410,000,000
|
Mining |
$248,080,000,000
|
Mining (other than oil and gas) |
$50,380,000,000
|
Mining support |
$51,270,000,000
|
Oil and gas |
$145,990,000,000
|
Agriculture |
$137,120,000,000
|
Farms |
$107,140,000,000
|
Forestry, fishing, and related |
$30,080,000,000
|
Arts and entertainment |
$528,620,000,000
|
Food service |
$285,480,000,000
|
Performing arts, sports, and museums |
$73,040,000,000
|
Amusements, gambling, and general recreation |
$73,040,000,000 |
This appears to be a mistake by Randall and should read $58,110,000,000
|
Accommodation |
$111,990,000,000
|
Information |
$658,630,000,000
|
Broadcasting and telecommunications |
$366,560,000,000
|
Information and data processing |
$78,300,000,000
|
Film, video, and sound recording |
$61,610,000,000
|
Publishing (including software) |
$152,170,000,000
|
Transportation and storage |
$401,280,000,000
|
Warehousing and storage |
$40,590,000,000
|
Water |
$14,730,000,000
|
Air |
$36,770,000,000 |
This appears to be a mistake by Randall and should read $63,680,000,000
|
Rail |
$31,730,000,000
|
Truck |
$116,520,000,000
|
Transit and land passenger |
$24,110,000,000
|
Pipeline |
$12,360,000,000
|
Other transport) |
$97,560,000,000
|
Billionaires
Category
|
Person
|
Networth
|
Ten Richest Ranking
|
Technology
|
Carlos Slim Helú and family
|
$74,000,000,000
|
First
|
Bill Gates
|
$56,000,000,000
|
Second
|
Larry Ellison
|
$39,500,000,000
|
Fifth
|
Larry Page
|
$19,800,000,000
|
|
Sergey Brin
|
$19,800,000,000
|
|
Jeff Bezos
|
$18,000,000,000
|
|
Steve Ballmer
|
$14,500,000,000
|
|
Mark Zuckerberg
|
$13,500,000,000
|
|
Paul Allen
|
$13,500,000,000
|
|
Steve Jobs (D)
|
$8,300,000,000
|
|
Eric Schmidt
|
$7,000,000,000
|
|
Sean Parker
|
$1,600,000,000
|
|
Steve Case
|
$1,300,000,000
|
|
Politicians and alleged evil plutocratic puppet masters
|
Warren Buffett
|
$50,000,000,000
|
Third
|
Charles Koch
|
$22,000,000,000
|
|
David Koch
|
$22,000,000,000
|
|
Michael Bloomberg
|
$18,100,000,000
|
|
George Soros
|
$14,000,000,000
|
|
Silvio Berlusconi and family
|
$7,800,000,000
|
|
Rupert Murdoch
|
$7,600,000,000
|
|
David Geffen
|
$6,000,000,000
|
|
Uncategorized
|
Bernard Arnault
|
$41,000,000,000
|
Fourth
|
Lakshmi Mittal
|
$31,100,000,000
|
Sixth
|
Amancio Ortega
|
$31,000,000,000
|
Seventh
|
Eike Batista
|
$30,000,000,000
|
Eighth
|
Mukesh Ambani
|
$27,000,000,000
|
Ninth
|
Walmart
|
Christy Walton and family
|
$26,500,000,000
|
Tenth
|
Jim Walton
|
$21,300,000,000
|
|
Alice Walton
|
$21,200,000,000
|
|
S. Robson Walton
|
$21,000,000,000
|
|
Fictional (source: Forbes)
|
Carlisle Cullen
|
$34,500,000,000
|
|
Scrooge McDuck
|
$33,500,000,000
|
|
Bruce Wayne
|
$6,500,000,000
|
|
Artemis Fowl
|
$1,900,000,000
|
|
Fashion
|
Lilianne Bettencourt
|
$23,500,000,000
|
|
Ralph Lauren
|
$5,800,000,000
|
|
Ronald Lauder
|
$3,100,000,000
|
|
Art and media
|
George Lucas
|
$3,200,000,000
|
|
Oprah Winfrey
|
$3,200,000,000
|
|
Five wealthiest rappers combined
|
$1,250,000,000
|
|
J. K. Rowling
|
$1,000,000,000
|
|
Donald Trump
|
Donald Trump
|
$2,700,000,000
|
|
Combined net worth of the world's 1,210 billionaires $4,500,000,000,000
Corporations
by market capitalization (combined value of all stock)
Company |
Value
|
Saudi Aramco (State-owned company--estimated market value) |
$2,940,000,000,000
|
Apple |
$358,310,000,000
|
ExxonMobil |
$357,910,000,000
|
PetroChina |
$280,160,000,000
|
IBM |
$211,640,000,000
|
Microsoft |
$211,340,000,000
|
Bank of China |
$208,810,000,000
|
China Mobile |
$201,510,000,000
|
Royal Dutch Shell |
$199,780,000,000
|
Nestle |
$193,700,000,000
|
Chevron |
$188,030,000,000
|
Facebook 2011 valuation |
$70,000,000,000
|
AT&T attempted T-Mobile purchase |
$39,000,000,000
|
Facebook 2010 valuation |
$33,450,000,000
|
Zynga 2011 valuation |
$14,000,000,000
|
LivingSocial 2011 valuation |
$2,980,000,000
|
US household income
Cost to buy the world a coke
Item |
Cost
|
Cost to buy the world a coke (2011 wholesale prices) |
$2,240,000,000
|
Coca-Cola's annual marketing budget |
$2,980,000,000
|
Cost to teach the world to sing (four half-hour lessons at $30 each) |
$840,000,000,000
|
State government spending
[map without amounts]
Total US states' debt |
$46,000,000,000
|
US foreign military aid
Area |
Amount
|
Total |
$11,010,000,000
|
Afghanistan |
$5,800,000,000
|
Israel |
$2,410,000,000
|
Egypt |
$1,320,000,000
|
Other |
$5,800,000,000
|
US foreign humanitarian and economic aid
Area |
Amount
|
Total |
$11,010,000,000
|
Iraq and Afghanistan |
$5,370,000,000
|
West Bank and Ghana |
$1,050,000,000
|
Africa (total) |
$8,850,000,000
|
Other |
$19,130,000,000
|
Ft. Knox gold reserves
Item |
Value
|
Ft. Knox gold reserves (November 2011 prices) |
$245,900,000,000
|
Unclaimed US treasury bonds |
$16,000,000,000
|
All the tea in China |
$4,210,000,000
|
Corporate tax deduction
(Note: some of the corporate deductions are very technical, and even with the help of a technical accountant, I had trouble making sense of them. The text below is my best attempt at an English interpretation of the legalese.)
Area |
Deductions
|
Corporate tax deduction |
$125,180,000,000
|
Reduced tax on first $10 million of corporate income |
$3,240,000,000
|
Delay of taxes on 'income' made from defaulting on a debt (Temporary stimulus measure) |
$21,390,000,000
|
Temporary change to equipment depreciation rules allowing more (and sooner) deductions on the purchase of new equipment |
$24,390,000,000
|
Clean energy, space, science, and tech R&D |
$13,900,000,000
|
Miscellaneous rules for international corporate finance |
$6,800,000,000
|
Foreign corporation income financing rules |
$13,680,000,000
|
Individual tax deductions
These are types of income, or uses of income, which the government has partly or fully exempt from tax, often to encourage some activity. This can be thought of as "spent" tax revenue, although it's not quite that simple; there's no guarantee that removing the deduction would add that amount of revenue, because the presence of the deduction may be affecting taxpayers' spending habits.
Area |
Deductions
|
Small business health insurance |
$1,620,000,000
|
Federal employee expenses abroad |
$7,910,000,000
|
EITC (anti-poverty low-income tax credit) |
$78,760,000,000
|
Donations to charity |
$39,130,000,000
|
Capital gains (investment income) |
$78,760,000,000
|
Pension contributions |
$84,940,000,000
|
Other |
$64,970,000,000
|
Employee fringe benefits |
$6,690,000,000
|
Scholarships |
$2,130,000,000
|
Property taxes |
$15,710,000,000
|
Employer-provided transportation |
$3,850,000,000
|
Retirement accounts |
$24,630,000,000
|
Cafeteria plans |
$26,760,000,000
|
State and local bonds |
$19,560,000,000
|
Company daycare |
$3,140,000,000
|
College and university tax credits |
$12,060,000,000
|
Mortgage interest |
$92,040,000,000
|
Medicare Benefits |
$55,850,000,000
|
Child care |
$55,850,000,000
|
Employer health plans |
$107,140,000,000
|
Making Work Pay (ending) |
$60,510,000,000
|
First-time homebuyer credit |
$8,820,000,000
|
Veterans' benefits |
$5,570,000,000
|
Life insurance benefits |
$25,750,000,000
|
Capital gains death exclusion |
$25,750,000,000
|
Social security and railroad retirement |
$27,170,000,000
|
Home sale capital gains |
$15,200,000,000
|
Federal spending
Disasters
Disaster |
Estimated Total Damage |
Notes
|
Japan 2011 Earthquake |
$235,000,000,000 |
reconstruction and recovery cost, World Bank estimate
|
Hurricane Katrina |
$107,440,000,000 |
|
1988 US Drought |
$78,060,000,000 |
|
1980 US Drought |
$60,740,000,000 |
|
Hurricane Andrew |
$46,180,000,000 |
|
9/11 insured losses |
$40,000,000,000 |
For hurricanes, the rule of thumb is that total losses are roughly double insured losses. It is unclear if a similar rule exist for terrorism.
|
Hurricane Ike |
$28,170,000,000 |
|
Hurricane Irene |
$8,000,000,000 |
(estimated)
|
Hypothetical disasters
Estimated total losses if the disaster happened today
(based on insurance industry modeling)
Disaster |
Estimated Total Losses |
Notes
|
1938 Long Island Express |
$236,960,000,000 |
if it had curved left and made landfall in New Jersey instead of Long Island
|
1812 New Madrid, Missouri earthquake |
$206,050,000,000 |
|
1926 Miami hurricane |
$202,000,000,000 |
|
1909 San Francisco earthquake |
$197,810,000,000 |
|
1907 Galveston hurricane |
$82,420,000,000 |
|
Long Island Express |
$78,060,000,000 |
(1938 New England Hurricane)
|
Charleston SC, quake of 1886 |
$76,240,000,000 |
|
1989 Loma Prieta earthquake |
$12,360,000,000 |
|
Cost of electricity
(Price of electricity to power all US homes for a year, by plant type)
Plant Type |
Cost |
Notes
|
Advance combined cycle natural gas |
78,100,000,000 |
|
Conventional Coal+Public Health Burden in Appalacia [sic]+Air pollution from power plants+Climate Impact |
117,340,000,000+55,400,000,000+118,300,000,000+40,030,000,000 |
|
BP oil spill claims fund
New York CIty
Area |
Combined Property Value
|
New York City |
$806,490,000,000
|
Manhattan |
$281,040,000,000
|
Queens |
$208,180,000,000
|
Brooklyn |
$201,230,000,000
|
Staten Island |
$61,230,000,000
|
Bronx |
$54,660,000,000
|
Megaprojects
Project |
Cost |
Notes
|
National missile defense shield cost through 2013 |
$107,690,000,000 |
|
F-22 Raptor program |
$67,610,000,000 |
halted
|
Planned Russian Bering Strait tunnel |
$66,000,000,000 |
|
Obama's 2011 high-speed rail proposal |
$53,000,000,000 |
|
Cost to build SF-to-LA high-speed rail |
$45,000,000,000 |
|
UK Crossrail |
$26,490,000,000 |
|
King Abdullah Economic City |
$50,020,000,000 |
High-speed rail $9,120,000,000
|
Hong Kong International airport |
$27,120,000,000 |
|
Manhattan Project |
$24,400,000,000 |
|
2nd Avenue NYC subway line |
$17,960,000,000 |
|
Big Dig cost |
$18,510,000,000 |
as of 2008
|
Failed Army intelligence-sharing computer system |
$2,700,000,000 |
|
Bay Bridge span replacement |
$6,300,000,000 |
|
Downtown Dubai project |
$20,270,000,000 |
Burj Khalifa $1,520,000,000
|
Channel Tunnel |
$22,960,000,000 |
|
Nimitz-class carrier |
$4,930,000,000 |
|
Gerald R. Ford-class carrier |
$9,000,000,000 |
|
Amtrak 30-year plan for northeast corridor |
$192,000,000,000 |
Randall made a mistake here the value represented by the blocks is $117,000,000,000
|
City Qatar is building to host the 2022 World Cup |
$207,000,000,000 |
|
Apollo moon landing project |
$192,000,000,000 |
|
International Space Station |
$138,000,000,000 |
|
Space Shuttle program |
$194,620,000,000 |
|
US interstate highway system |
$465,970,000,000 |
The largest single public-works project in the history of mankind
|
Federal budget
Budget options
Stimulus spending
Item |
Value
|
2008 Total |
$205,930,000,000
|
Individual tax breaks |
$120,110,000,000
|
Student loan guarantees |
$33,470,000,000
|
Business tax breaks |
$52,360,000,000
|
2009 Total |
$747,950,000,000
|
Tax breaks |
$307,530,000,000
|
Education |
$90,460,000,000
|
Medicare/Medicaid |
$80,500,000,000
|
Transportation |
$32,560,000,000
|
Unemployment |
$62,740,000,000
|
Infrastructure |
$24,000,000,000
|
Other spending |
$150,160,000,000
|
Bailouts
Item |
Value |
Notes
|
1980s-1990 S&L bailout |
$78,300,000,000 |
total cost to taxpayers
|
Cost to FDIC of bank failures |
$19,000,000,000 |
resulting from the 2008 financial crisis
|
TARP bailout funds distributed |
$392,980,000,000 |
Out of $700,000,000,000 available
|
Estimated TARP taxpayer losses |
$41,660,000,000 |
|
Value of outstanding TARP assets |
$144,440,000 |
Randall made a mistake here the chart should read $144,440,000,000
|
Bailout funds returned |
$206,880,000,000 |
|
Current Eurozone bailout fund |
$1,361,700,000,000 |
|
US Spending on Wars
Including only direct spending on war operations, and not resulting veterans' benefits or interest on debt incurred.
War |
Cost
|
World War I |
$334,000,000,000
|
Spanish-American War |
$9,030,000,000
|
Civil War |
$79,740,000,000
|
American revolution |
$2,410,000,000
|
1812 |
$1,550,000,000
|
Mexican War |
$2,380,000,000
|
World War II |
$4,104,000,000,000
|
Korean War |
$341,000,000,000
|
Vietnam War |
$738,000,000,000
|
Persian Gulf War |
$102,000,000,000
|
Iraq War |
$784,000,000,000
|
War in Afghanistan |
$321,000,000,000
|
Trillions
Size of derivatives markets by year
Year |
Size of market
|
1988 |
$3,090,000,000,000
|
1995 |
$26,690,000,000,000
|
2001 |
$86,390,000,000,000
|
2005 |
$227,260,000,000,000
|
2009 |
$439,000,000,000,000
|
Size of credit default swap market by year (included in derivatives)
Year |
Size of market
|
2001 |
$1,150,000,000,000
|
2005 |
$19,350,000,000,000
|
2007 |
$66,280,000,000,000
|
2009 |
$31,350,000,000,000
|
US household net worth
Item |
Worth
|
US household |
$58,740,000,000,000
|
Poorer half |
$1,470,000,000,000
|
Richer half |
$57,270,000,000,000
|
Richest 1% |
$19,620,000,000,000
|
Total debt in the US
Item |
Worth
|
Total debt in the US |
$36,560,000,000,000
|
State and local government |
$2,500,000,000,000
|
Household |
$13,560,000,000,000
|
Federal government |
$9,510,000,000,000
|
Business |
$10,980,000,000,000
|
World GDP
Area |
GDP
|
World |
$62,900,000,000,000
|
North America |
$17,850,000,000,000
|
United States |
$14,530,000,000,000
|
South America |
$3,070,000,000,000
|
EU |
$16,240,000,000,000
|
Europe (incl. Russia and Turkey) |
$20,130,000,000,000
|
Africa |
$1,610,000,000,000
|
Asia |
$17,530,000,000,000
|
Oceania |
$1,310,000,000,000
|
Total public debt
(Note: US figures are from 2011, while the other totals use 2010 debt in 2011 dollars, which is likely an underestimate.)
Area |
Debt |
Notes
|
EU (total) |
$13,340,000,000,000 |
|
United States |
$10,200,000,000,000 |
(Plus internal government borrowing of 4,740,000,000,000)
|
Japan |
$8,630,000,000,000 |
|
Germany |
$2,480,000,000,000 |
|
Italy |
$2,140,000,000,000 |
|
India |
$2,140,000,000,000 |
|
China |
$1,907,000,000,000 |
|
France |
$1,767,000,000,000 |
|
United Kingdom |
$1,654,000,000,000 |
|
Brazil |
$1,281,000,000,000 |
|
Canada |
$1,130,000,000,000 |
|
Spain |
$834,210,000,000 |
|
Mexico |
$584,860,000,000 |
|
Greece |
$460,180,000,000 |
|
Energy reserves
Type of energy |
World total proven [type] reserves |
US Reserves
|
Oil |
$131,960,000,000,000 (November 2011 prices) |
$20,580,000,000,000
|
Coal |
$72,850,000,000,000 (2011 central Appalachian prices) |
$20,020,000,000,000
|
Natural gas |
$21,470,000,000,000 (2011 NYMEX prices) |
$930,470,000,000
|
Value of 10 years of electricity generated if the surface of Texas was converted to:
Thing |
Value
|
Solar power plants |
$89,240,000,000,000
|
Wind turbines |
$7,950,000,000,000
|
All US real estate
Type |
Value
|
All |
$28,380,000,000,000
|
Home |
$23,010,000,000,000
|
Commercial (includes stores, apartments, industrial, etc.) |
$5,370,000,000,000
|
Value of all gold ever mined
Item |
Value
|
Value of all gold ever mined (late 2011 prices) |
$9,120,000,000,000
|
Liquid Assets
Item |
Value
|
World Total Liquid Assets |
$77,000,000,000,000
|
GDP by year
Year |
GDP (total economic activity) the world (minus US) |
GDP (total economic productivity) of the US (minus government) |
US federal government
|
1920 |
|
|
|
1930 |
|
|
|
1940 |
|
|
|
1942 |
|
|
$500,000,000,000
|
1943 |
|
|
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1944 |
|
|
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1945 |
|
|
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1946 |
|
|
$500,000,000,000
|
1947 |
|
$2,000,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1948 |
|
$2,000,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1949 |
|
$2,000,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1950 |
|
$2,500,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1951 |
|
$2,500,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1952 |
|
$2,500,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1953 |
|
$2,500,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1954 |
|
$2,500,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1955 |
|
$3,000,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1956 |
|
$3,000,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1957 |
|
$3,000,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1958 |
|
$3,000,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1959 |
|
$3,500,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1960 |
|
$3,500,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1961 |
|
$3,500,000,000,000 |
$500,000,000,000
|
1962 |
|
$3,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1963 |
|
$4,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1964 |
|
$4,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1965 |
|
$4,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1966 |
|
$4,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1967 |
|
$5,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1968 |
|
$5,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1969 |
|
$5,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1970 |
|
$5,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1971 |
|
$5,500,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1972 |
|
$6,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1973 |
|
$6,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1974 |
|
$6,000,000,000,000 |
$1,000,000,000,000
|
1975 |
|
$5,500,000,000,000 |
$1,500,000,000,000
|
1976 |
|
$6,000,000,000,000 |
$1,500,000,000,000
|
1977 |
|
$6,000,000,000,000 |
$1,500,000,000,000
|
1978 |
|
$6,500,000,000,000 |
$1,500,000,000,000
|
1979 |
|
$7,000,000,000,000 |
$1,500,000,000,000
|
1980 |
$19,000,000,000,000 |
$6,500,000,000,000 |
$1,500,000,000,000
|
1981 |
$19,000,000,000,000 |
$6,500,000,000,000 |
$1,500,000,000,000
|
1982 |
$19,000,000,000,000 |
$6,000,000,000,000 |
$1,500,000,000,000
|
1983 |
$20,000,000,000,000 |
$6,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1984 |
$20,000,000,000,000 |
$7,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1985 |
$22,000,000,000,000 |
$7,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1986 |
$23,000,000,000,000 |
$7,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1987 |
$23,500,000,000,000 |
$7,500,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1988 |
$25,000,000,000,000 |
$8,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1989 |
$26,000,000,000,000 |
$8,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1990 |
$27,000,000,000,000 |
$8,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1991 |
$27,000,000,000,000 |
$8,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1992 |
$31,000,000,000,000 |
$8,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1993 |
$32,500,000,000,000 |
$8,500,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1994 |
$33,000,000,000,000 |
$9,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1995 |
$34,000,000,000,000 |
$9,000,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1996 |
$34,500,000,000,000 |
$9,500,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1997 |
$36,500,000,000,000 |
$9,500,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1998 |
$36,500,000,000,000 |
$10,500,000,000,000 |
$2,000,000,000,000
|
1999 |
$37,000,000,000,000 |
$10,500,000,000,000 |
$2,500,000,000,000
|
2000 |
$39,000,000,000,000 |
$10,500,000,000,000 |
$2,500,000,000,000
|
2001 |
$39,000,000,000,000 |
$10,500,000,000,000 |
$2,500,000,000,000
|
2002 |
$41,000,000,000,000 |
$10,500,000,000,000 |
$2,500,000,000,000
|
2003 |
$42,500,000,000,000 |
$11,000,000,000,000 |
$2,500,000,000,000
|
2004 |
$45,000,000,000,000 |
$11,500,000,000,000 |
$2,500,000,000,000
|
2005 |
$46,500,000,000,000 |
$11,500,000,000,000 |
$3,000,000,000,000
|
2006 |
$50,000,000,000,000 |
$12,000,000,000,000 |
$3,000,000,000,000
|
2007 |
$53,000,000,000,000 |
$12,000,000,000,000 |
$3,000,000,000,000
|
2008 |
$57,500,000,000,000 |
$11,500,000,000,000 |
$3,000,000,000,000
|
2009 |
$56,500,000,000,000 |
$11,000,000,000,000 |
$3,500,000,000,000
|
2010 |
$61,000,000,000,000 |
$11,500,000,000,000 |
$3,500,000,000,000
|
2011 |
$64,500,000,000,000 |
$11,500,000,000,000 |
$4,000,000,000,000
|
Estimated total economic production of the human race (so far)
Thing |
Value |
Notes
|
Estimated total economic production of the human race (so far) |
$2,396,950,000,000,000 |
(roughly three-fifths of it since 1980)
|