(#368) “The Crash Course” Chapter 12: How Much is a Trillion?
As posted on the Peak Prosperity.com and the Chris Martenson’s Peak Prosperity YouTube Channel
Background
The Crash Course has provided millions of viewers with the context for the massive changes now underway, as economic growth as we’ve known it is ending due to depleting resources. But it also offers real hope. Those individuals who take informed action today, while we still have time, can lower their exposure to these coming trends — and even discover a better way of life in the process.
In this Blog, I am presenting the 27 (inclusive of the introduction) installments of The Crash Course, one per week.
Previous installments of “The Crash Course” can be found here:
- Blog (#311) Introducing “The Crash Course”
- Blog (#314) Chapter 1: Three Beliefs
- Blog (#319) Chapter 2: “The Three ‘Es'”
- Blog (#325) Chapter 3: Exponential Growth
- Blog (#329) Chapter 4: Compounding is the Problem
- Blog (#333) Chapter 5: Growth vs Prosperity
- Blog (#338) Chapter 6: What is Money?
- Blog (#342) Chapter 7: Money Creation – Banks
- Blog (#347) Chapter 8: Money Creation – The Fed
- Blog (#351) Chapter 9: A Brief History of US Money
- Blog (#357) Chapter 10: Quantitative Easing
- Blog (#363) Chapter 11: Inflation
Chapter 12 of 26: How Much is a Trillion?
Transcript
During the Crash Course you will often encounter numbers that are expressed in trillions. How much is a trillion? You know what? I’m not really sure myself.
A trillion is a very, very big number, and I think it would be worth spending a couple of minutes trying to get our arms around the concept.
First, a numerical review.
A thousand is a one with three zeros after it.
A million is a thousand times bigger than that and it’s a one with six zeros after it.
At this level I can really get my mind around the difference between these two numbers. A million dollars in the bank is a very different concept from a thousand dollars in the bank.
I get that.
A billion then is a thousand times bigger than a million, and it’s a one followed by 9 zeros.
And a trillion is a thousand times bigger than that, and it’s a one followed by 12 zeros.
So a trillion is a thousand billion, which means it is a million million.
You know what? I don’t know what that means!
I can’t visualize that, so let’s take a different tack on this.
Suppose I gave you a thousand dollar bill and said you and a friend had to spend it all in a single evening out on the town. You’d have a pretty good time.
Now suppose you had a stack of thousand dollar bills that was four inches in height. If you did, you know what? Congratulations, you’d be a millionaire.
Now suppose you wanted to enter the super-elite of the wealthy and have a billion dollars. How tall of a stack of thousand dollar bills would that be?
The answer is a stack 358 feet high, seen here reaching 50 feet higher than the Statue of Liberty.
Now how about a stack of thousand dollar bills to equal a trillion dollars? How tall would that stack be? Think of an answer.
Well, that stack would be 67.9 miles high.
And I meant stack, not laid end to end or anything cheesy like that. A solid stack of thousand dollar bills, 67.9 miles high. Now that’s a trillion dollars.
That still doesn’t do it for you?
Okay, I want you to imagine that you’re in a car on a roadway that is lined at the side with a sideways stack of thousand dollar bills. A nice, compact, rectangular column of thousand dollar bills is snaking along the roadside next to you as you drive. You drive along — brrrrrrrrrrrrr — without stopping for a little more than an hour, and the entire way there’s that stack of thousand dollar bills right next you, on the side of the road, the whole way.
Said another way, the amount of money created in the past year in the US economic system, if it had been printed up as thousand dollar bills and stacked along the side of the road, would stretch from the center of Manhattan to Trenton, New Jersey
So there it is. Either you can visualize the stack better by driving along next to it, or by standing on top if it, or any other way you wish to express this statement.
But make no mistake, a trillion is a very, very big number and we should not be lulled into complacency simply because it is too big to really get our minds around. Instead, we should be very nervous that our money supply now stands at – not 1 . . . but 12 trillion dollars. [ . . . in 2014 when this series was released. The number today . . . just 4 years later is $21 trillion dollars]
And the total accumulated debts and liabilities of the US are several times greater than that! We are living in an era where our leaders are making decisions at orders of magnitude that they simply can’t truly understand.
And many politicians have less expertise in math, economics or business than most people watching this video. When they vote for the next trillion-dollar bailout, raise the debt level by another trillion, or pressure the Federal Reserve for another trillion-dollar stimulus program – they don’t have any real sense of what the implications will be. No one can.
We have reached the point where we’re operating in territory beyond our neural programming. As a result, unintended consequences to our current policies are guaranteed. We need to be ready for that.
Oh, and if you think wrapping your brain around the concept of a trillion is hard, let’s turn to Japan for a moment. In August of 2013, Japan’s national debt exceeded 1 quadrillion yen for the first time.
How much is a quadrillion? Well, if we swapped out the $1,000 bills we’ve been using with 1,000-Yen notes, the stack would wrap around the Earth almost 3 times.
Ok, let’s move on to the next chapter. My brain hurts. Please join me for our next chapter, a very important one, on Debt.
Chapters are between 3 and 25 minutes in length. All 27 sections (inclusive of the introduction) take 4 hours and 36 minutes to watch in full.
Chris Martenson, is a former American biochemical scientist and Vice President of Science Applications International Corporation. Currently he is an author and trend forecaster interested in macro trends regarding the economy, energy composition and the environment at his site, www.peakprosperity.com.