Sign up for the Smarter Faster newsletter
A weekly newsletter featuring the biggest ideas from the smartest people
Prosperity is not a given, and neither is poverty. As these maps show, rich regions can lose their wealth, and poor places can turn affluent.
While they don’t explain the ebbs and flows of fortune, these maps do provide a fascinating, granular view of where those fortunes rose and fell in Europe, in just over a century.
Both maps show regional GDPs relative to the European average. The one on the left shows the situation in 1900, and the one on the right shows how things stood in 2010. Note: These GDP levels aren’t just relative to the average — they’re also relative over time. Thanks to unprecedented advances in technology, living standards in the early 21st century have vastly improved over those at the turn of the 20th.
In other words, the inhabitants of a “poor” region in 2010 are better off, on average, than those of a “rich” region in 1900.