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01 / 05
Superabundance Cuts Through Pessimism

Blog Post | Human Development

Superabundance Cuts Through Pessimism

The introduction to the Polish translation of Superabundance.

Summary: Superabundance by Marian Tupy and Gale Pooley counters the pessimistic outlook on resource scarcity, arguing that resources have become more accessible over time thanks to human innovation. Through “time prices” the authors demonstrate that abundance is achievable even as the global population grows. The book underscores the importance of free markets, freedom of speech, and economic freedom as pillars for sustaining prosperity and refuting outdated Malthusian fears.


In a world full of popular media headlines warning of resource exhaustion, ecological crises, and overpopulation, it’s worth picking up a book that explains why there’s no need to be afraid. Superabundance by Marian Tupy and Gale Pooley, based on data and compelling arguments, shows that the availability of a wide range of resources has been steadily increasing over the past 150 years. This is possible thanks to progress and the people behind it—their creativity and innovation.

Depending on the selection of goods and the period of analysis, abundance—understood as the number of work hours required to acquire a certain product or service—has improved over recent decades by an average of 2-4% per year, effectively doubling every 20 to 35 years. To understand the phenomenon of abundance, time itself is key, treated by the authors as a measure of wealth. This approach provides an interesting alternative to the useful yet imperfect metric of GDP (Gross Domestic Product). The so-called “time prices” used by Tupy and Pooley address some of GDP’s weaknesses, such as the difficulties in measuring changes in product quality and innovation.

From a historical perspective, the accumulated knowledge at the end of the 18th century, along with liberal ideas, enabled a shift from chronic shortages to the construction of a world of increasing abundance in various fields and regions of the globe. A significant advantage of the book is the data and charts that illustrate how humanity’s situation has improved over the decades. Furthermore, in the case of many goods and resources, abundance has increased faster than the population, which Tupy and Pooley call the titular “superabundance.”

The authors debunk the myth of overpopulation and refute the ideas of Malthusian proponents who argue that, given the planet’s finite resources, population growth is unsustainable. A larger population means more minds capable of generating innovative solutions to our shared problems. As George Gilder states in the book’s foreword, “people are not a burden on resources—they are a source of resources.”

Superabundance challenges the pessimistic beliefs about the world’s worsening condition, arguing that humanity’s future can be not only bearable but also filled with prosperity. The Foundation for Economic Freedom supported the Polish edition of the book, not only to show readers that the state of the world today is much better than in the past but also better than we might believe. More importantly, the book leaves us with a key question: will superabundance continue?

Tupy and Pooley highlight the conditions necessary for this continuation. Firstly, it will depend on people and the freedom of thought leading to ideas that can undergo market testing and ultimately drive progress. Secondly, freedom of speech is crucial for the growth of abundance, a freedom that today faces strong challenges—from both authoritarian regimes in poorer countries and from universities in wealthier nations. Thirdly, the continuation of progress requires the defense and strengthening of a free market, where the true value of human ideas is tested.

The authors note that human psychological traits, shaped by hundreds of thousands of years of evolution, are not conducive to institutional solutions that promote progress. The biologically driven “craving for a daily dose of fear and anxiety” creates fertile ground for various populist forces in politics, which promise equality and security, promote tribalism (us versus them), and view the economy as a zero-sum game—where one person’s gain is another’s loss. However, most phenomena in a free economy are positive-sum games, benefiting various parties involved in transactions, often strangers to each other. The arguments in Tupy and Pooley’s book offer a rational counterpoint to strong tendencies in the human psyche, which were beneficial for survival in prehistoric times but hinder development and quality of life improvement in today’s economy, based on trade, services, peaceful cooperation, and globalization.

Poland embarked on a path of accelerated development after its successful transformation in 1989, and despite many economic challenges, it has the potential for further growth and even greater prosperity in the future. The lessons from Superabundance can be valuable to anyone who wants to create more favorable conditions for economic freedom, private enterprise, innovation, and, consequently, economic growth. I encourage you to read it and to engage as citizens in the pursuit of continued progress.

This article was translated from original Polish using ChatGPT 4o. It appears as the introduction to the Polish edition of Superabundance.

Buenos Aires Times | Macroeconomic Environment

Inflation in Buenos Aires City Slows to Monthly 1.6 Percent

“Consumer prices in Buenos Aires City rose 1.6 percent in May, lower than the expectations of most analysts and a slowdown from the previous month.

The news will be welcomed by President Javier Milei’s national government, which is awaiting the publishing of the INDEC national statistics bureau’s national figure later this week.

According to data from the Buenos Aires City Statistics Office, prices in the capital were up 1.6 percent, down from the 2.3 percent recorded in April. Most private consultancy firms expected a rate of around two percent.

Inflation so far this year in the capital totals 12.9 percent – a massive drop on the 48.3 percent recorded over the same period in 2024.”

From Buenos Aires Times.

Curiosities | Trade

The Real Story of the “China Shock”

“The total number of jobs remained largely stable in the U.S.—and even slightly increased—as people adapted to competition from Chinese trade. Trade-exposed places recovered after 2010, primarily by adding young-adult workers, foreign-born immigrants, women and the college-educated to service-sector jobs.

Lost in the alarm over jobs is that trade with China delivered substantial benefits to the U.S. economy. Most obvious are the lower prices Americans pay for everything from clothing and electronics to furniture. One study found that a 1 percentage point increase in imports from China led to about a 1.9% drop in consumer prices in the U.S. For every factory job lost to Chinese competition, American consumers in aggregate gained an estimated $411,000 in consumer welfare. This so-called Walmart effect disproportionately helped middle- and lower-income families, who spend a bigger share of their budget on the kinds of cheap goods China excels at producing.

U.S. businesses also reaped advantages. Manufacturers who use imported parts or materials benefited from cheaper inputs, making them more competitive globally. An American appliance company, for example, could buy low-cost Chinese components to lower its production costs, keep its product prices down and potentially hire more workers.”

From Wall Street Journal.

Curiosities | Cost of Services

Service Costs Aren’t Exploding Anymore

“The trend of increasing service costs defined many of our economic debates for a decade. There was just one small problem — by the time we started talking about how to address this trend, the trend had changed…

Until around 1990, health spending rapidly ate up a bigger and bigger portion of our national income. Then the increase slowed down, but it did go up some more until around 2009. But after that, it leveled off; in 2024, Americans didn’t spend a greater percent of their income on health care than they did in 2009…

Higher education has been getting more affordable for years, and the decrease in affordability in the late 2000s and 2010s was significantly overstated. The popular narrative that college is getting less and less affordable is wrong…

These changing trends don’t mean that services are cheap and we can stop thinking about service costs. First of all, there are still some services that are getting less affordable over time — most notably, child care. Second, the recent mild increases in affordability for health care and higher education haven’t erased the big cost increases that happened in the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s; Americans still pay a lot more for these things than Europeans or Asians do, relative to their incomes. So there’s still probably scope to bring down the costs of health care and college.

But with all that said, the change in the trends in service costs and service productivity mean that our debates about these topics need to change.”

From Noahpinion.

Blog Post | Cost of Material Goods

From Silk Stockings to Synthetic Diamonds

Capitalist innovation makes luxury commonplace.

Summary: The economist Joseph Schumpeter explained capitalism’s power to transform luxuries for the elite into affordable goods for the masses. From silk stockings once reserved for queens to synthetic diamonds now within reach of everyday consumers, capitalist innovation drives this democratization of consumption.


In his 1942 book Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, the Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter explained one of the most important characteristics of free market economies. He wrote:

It is the cheap cloth, the cheap cotton and rayon fabric, boots, motorcars and so on that are the typical achievements of capitalist production, and not as a rule improvements that would mean much to the rich man. Queen Elizabeth owned silk stockings. The capitalist achievement does not typically consist in providing more silk stockings for queens but in bringing them within the reach of factory girls.

Schumpeter’s anecdote about Queen Elizabeth and silk stockings illustrates capitalism’s remarkable ability to democratize consumption.

Initially, silk stockings symbolized privilege reserved only for royalty and elites. Yet capitalism’s true achievement, Schumpeter argued, is not merely supplying luxury to the rich but making such goods affordable for ordinary people. Entrepreneurial innovation, mass production, competition, and technological advances – driven by profit incentives – bring previously unattainable products within everyone’s reach.

This phenomenon elevates the living standards of the less fortunate by breaking down class barriers and spreading prosperity more broadly. Capitalism’s transformative force, according to Schumpeter, lies in continually converting luxuries into everyday essentials, thereby enhancing human well-being across social strata.

The diamond industry today exemplifies Schumpeter’s insight perfectly. Historically, diamonds represented wealth and exclusivity, accessible primarily to the affluent. However, technological advancements, particularly synthetic diamond production via High Pressure High Temperature (HPHT) methods and Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) technology, have dramatically changed this dynamic.

Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD), for example, is a technique for creating synthetic diamonds by depositing carbon atoms from a carbon-rich gas onto a substrate. In this method, a diamond seed crystal is placed in a vacuum chamber filled with gases such as methane and hydrogen. When heated to very high temperatures, these gases break down, and carbon atoms accumulate layer-by-layer on the seed crystal, slowly forming a diamond. This process enables precise control over diamond purity, size, and quality, making it highly efficient and cost-effective compared to traditional diamond mining methods.

Not only have synthetic diamonds become more widely affordable, but they have also placed a downward pressure on natural diamond prices. As a recent article in The Guardian explained:

Natural diamonds cost 26% less in shops than two years ago, a drop during a time of high inflation that would be extraordinary were it not dwarfed by the poor fortune of their identical twins, lab-grown diamonds, which are now 74% cheaper than in 2020.

Furthermore, synthetic diamonds may appeal to modern consumers by offering ethical and environmental advantages over mined diamonds. Instead of sourcing diamonds from some of the world’s bloodiest conflict zones marked by human rights abuses and environments destroyed by primitive forms of mining, today’s diamonds increasingly come from the lab.

Much like silk stockings transitioned from royal exclusivity to widespread accessibility, diamonds today are undergoing a similar evolution. Synthetic diamonds eliminate historical barriers of price, scarcity, and exclusivity, transforming diamonds from symbols of privilege into everyday commodities.