How to be Cooler

August 18, 2010 by  
Filed under Sharing Economy

Last time, we broke down for you, “How to be a billionaire“. This time, we want to talk about something even more important, “How to be cooler”.

98.6 F. If you’re feeling well right now (and we hope you are), that’s very likely your body temperature. Everything has an ideal temperature range where it feels well and/or functions best. But, what is temperature anyway? It’s like a poll of molecules, that indicates the distribution of their speeds around the thermometer. Could their be an ideal pay-distribution temperature for your company or the US where it feels well and/or functions best?

Imagine a thermometer with 100 at the top and zero at the bottom. At 100, you’re broke. One person has all the pay, and it’s not you. At 0, everyone has the same pay as you. Well right now, that thermometer in the US is set at 46 for pay, and 85 for overall wealth. Maybe you’re feeling the heat with no raise, no job, or too much debt.

Now that 2 record highs are being set for every record low, maybe you’re feeling the heat outdoors too with heat waves, weirder weather or stronger storms. If it feels like we have a fever in the US, consider that it wasn’t always so. To get the flavor how it was, let us take you back to 1968, when things were much cooler.

’68 wasn’t the birth of the cool. That happened in 1957. But, you could say that’s when cool hit puberty. 2001: A space Odyssey was in the theaters. Steven Spielberg called it his film generation’s “big bang”. The band Led Zeppelin formed. They’ve been  ranked the third best, and one of the most influential bands of all time, by Spin. Richard Pryor, ranked #1 stand up comedian of all time by Comedy Central, released his first recording, and quiped, “When you ain’t got no money, you gotta get an attitude.” Truer words are seldom spoken.

It was easier to find cool culture, and it was easier to find a cool breeze too. Why? Because the average US temperature was 52.1 degrees, as compared to 53.1 for 2009, the second hottest year on record, which ended the 2000s, the hottest decade on record. A 1 degree rise may not sound like much until you consider that for each 1 degree Celsius we go up, crop yields drop 10%, and the area burned by wildfires in the West goes up by much larger percentages. Drought is now persistent in the West. It covers 1/3 of the Continental US, and it’s spreading. Not cool if you’re a farmer or a rancher. Not cool if you like to eat.

But, best of all, it was easier to find a good life, because the level of pay inequality was at a cooler 38, rather than where it is today, a hotter 46. To get a feel for what that would mean for you on a day-to-day basis, consider how long it would take you to earn enough to buy a Basic Life Package (BLiP). No one sells BLiPs yet, but we think someone should. Here’s what you’d get, 4 years of tuition towards a BS/BA degree, a new car with 10,000 gallons of gas to go with it (or equivalent electricity, if it’s a plug-in), 2 week hospital stay (just in case), and a new house.

The chart shows how long it would take to earn enough to pay for a BLiP if you earned the median pay (50% of earners make more than you, and 50% of earners make less than you), and all of your money went towards paying for it. In 1968 the median pay was $8,630 and it took 2 years and 25 weeks. Despite the fact that median pay in 2008 was 6x higher, at $52,029, it still takes almost 3x longer (7 years and 32 weeks) to pay for a BLiP than in ’68. Because of the modern trend towards financing, the additional earning time required to pay for a BLiP is actually significantly longer than this. Feeling stressed? More time devoted to earning enough to pay for a BLiP means less time for you to be you. Not cool.

As inequality is reduced, pay for the vast majority of people goes up, causing the time required to earn enough for a BliP to go down. If you’re in the top 2%, you may be thinking, “I like the way things are  now, and more equal pay means less pay for me”. That thinking, multiplied by many, is what’s helped to bring us the anemic GDP growth we see today.

What happens when you flip that thought to the much cooler, “If people don’t earn enough, then they can’t buy what I’m selling”? That kind of thinking helps to bring us something much closer to the ’68 economy, an expansion that wouldn’t quit. That’s good for business. It’s good for earners. it’s good for you.

Real talk from comedian Will Rogers in the 1920s nailed it this way:

“The money was all appropriated for the top in the hopes that it would trickle down to the needy. President Hoover didn’t know that money trickled up. Give it to the people at the bottom and the people at the top will have it before night, anyhow. But it will at least have passed through the poor fellow’s hands.”

We can’t take you back to ’68. But, if you want to see how much better (or worse) your pay and life in the US could be if we brought the inequality temperature down (or up). Play with the Trickler. Find your ideal tempreature. It let’s you see how your pay, GDP growth, savings rates, drop out rates, homicide rates and democracy all change as earning becomes cooler (more equal) or hotter (less equal).

If you feel the heat, maybe you see the light, and, by now, you may be thinking;

“How can I be cooler?”

Wear shades and walk the talk this way:

1) Push for public policy and candidates who are cooler.

2) Make green choices. that are sustainable. This will keep the temperature down and the biodiversity up.

3) Make blue choices too. By this, we mean, choose the product or service that works for you and produces less inequality for everyone else. So, for example, Pay Day Lenders, some retailers and certain types of credit cards are not blue. Fair Trade, No-Sweatshop goods and services and our own Open Pay are blue. Blue is the new black, and blue action will keep the societal temperature down, grow the economy and improve democracy.

We also want to give a shout out to everyone who is NOT yet earning and wants to be. We know your attitude has changed, and we want you to know you’re not alone. We feel you. Stay strong!



    Pasfoto_normal hankort Blue is the new black! RT @timoreilly Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    20100804_richard_french_026-100x100_normal RFx140 RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Jimfall1982_normal jfritchman Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG (via @timoreilly)

    Stafford_normal staffordmasie Those DM'ing about @openyear : Check them out here; http://bit.ly/c8W1Gg Cool concept re wealth sharing & distribution!

    Stafford_normal staffordmasie Great articles! "How to be Cooler" from @openyear http://bit.ly/cHbocn Also see "How to be a Billionaire" http://bit.ly/dkXNMm

    Blackout_myspace_logo_normal BlackoutINK RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Jb_082010_normal CloudCounter How to be Cooler : Openyear: http://bit.ly/9ywI0c -As inequality is reduced, pay for the vast majority of people goes up about

    Dsc_0164_2_normal fergarcia1966 RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Picture_17_normal leashless RT @ikostar: @leashless blip http://www.openyear.org/sharing-economy/how-to-be-cooler/ [well that's damn cool - thank you! check this out]

    Default_profile_5_normal adamdward Oh man I want to be cooler. Interesting article about pay. Be green and buy blue : http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Iscoop_3_normal fredbartels RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Nitin_normal nitin RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Ntak-unikode2008-red-side-6_normal ntarunkumar Make green and blue choices - great one! RT @timoreilly Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Screenshot_03_normal theeconomysucks How to be Cooler : Openyear http://bit.ly/aawirw

    Daniel-gbg2-60_normal danielbrandell How to be Cooler : Openyear: http://bit.ly/aawirw

    Dabra-2007-11-23_normal dabra RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Img00069-20100425-0052_normal cornell2684 There is a parallel between the economy and the seemingly rising temperatures http://www.openyear.org/sharing-economy/how-to-be-cooler/

    N544118125_334658_8615_normal niklasloven How to be Cooler : Openyear http://t.co/9tSoshL

    Ben_june_2010_normal thebuckst0p Interesting concept of cost of "Basic Life Package (BLiP)" as economic measure http://bit.ly/caM0U5

    99963100-57e5d1bd1f22eff5869bebcde0a83db1 9000BC http://www.openyear.org/sharing-economy/how-to-be-cooler/ be cooler...

    Jv_normal Villavelius RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    072010_profile_normal ibnuharis RT @timoreilly Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG #fb

    Sunil2_normal smehro RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    4506_1009094687499_1828921794_13883_5958772_n_normal dalanhurst RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Fb_pic_normal felixstang RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Mb_portrait_2008_normal markus_breuer How to really be cooler. Great food for thought and great facts and numbers: http://bit.ly/90v7W8 /via @timoreilly

    Image_normal kalenlee RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Img_0363_normal grechaw RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    N571980635_907797_116_normal matthunte RT @carpenterale: RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Photo_7-1_normal mariadeathstar This is an insanely interesting perspective: RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    41491_719867514_9285_n_normal johnsicat RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Photo_normal jstan RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG : timoreilly: Thought... http://bit.ly/dm5J3X

    Mg_2773_normal jcoleis RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Nick5_normal ikostar @leashless blip http://www.openyear.org/sharing-economy/how-to-be-cooler/

    Rob_at_runa_4_normal rberger Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG (via @timoreilly)

    05__5_normal claudiaramos RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    1984_normal _Orwell RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Tim_cohn_normal timcohn RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Borgeous_18792727_std_normal juanviejo RT @timoreilly Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    6925_145732094318_511414318_3490663_3107762_n_normal carpenterale RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Cool-hat_normal coldacid RT @timoreilly: Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

    Img_3811_v4_normal timoreilly Thought-provoking piece from @openyear: How to be cooler http://bit.ly/9SrpYG

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