fbpx Skip to Content

Holding everything else constant, if there had been no book innovation since 1439, a typical book would cost $35,143 today.

Get $2.35 Billion Worth of Books for Free

By Gale Pooley @gpooley

Gutenberg innovated the printing press around 1440. At that time, the average book cost around 135 days of labor, ranging from 15 days for a short book to 256 days for a major work. If each day contains eight hours of work, the average book will cost 1,080 hours. Today, blue-collar hourly compensation rate in the U.S. (wages and benefits) is around $32.54. Holding everything else constant, if there had been no book innovation since 1439, the money price of a typical book would be $35,143 today.

On July 4, 1971, Michael S. Hart created one of the first eBooks when he typed the Declaration of Independence on his computer and distributed the file to all his friends. He went on to found Project Gutenberg to encourage the creation and free distribution of eBooks. In the last 50 years, with the help of thousands of volunteers, the project has created a 67,000-volume library of books in over 60 languages and dialects.

If it weren’t for Gutenberg and his press and Hart and his computer, it would cost $2,354,594,400 to have such a 67,000-volume library. Yet that library is almost free today. As the Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Romer would say, knowledge has increasing returns. Knowledge tends to make it easier to create and discover new knowledge. Knowledge can and sometimes does “go exponential.”

In 2022 we can all enjoy reading a great book for free and use our extra 1,080 hours to create some other valuable new knowledge to share with the rest of the world.

Professor Gale L. Pooley teaches economics at Brigham Young University, Hawaii. He is a Senior Fellow at the Discovery Institute and a board member of HumanProgress.org

News

Vulture Surveillance System Alerts Zambian Park to Poisonings

News

Apple Unveils Groundbreaking Vision Pro AR/VR Headset

Exclusive

Apple Vision Pro Is Half the Price of the Apple II

News

DNA Sucked into Air Filters Can Reveal What Plants and Animals Are Nearby

News

New Airborne Radar Could Revolutionize Hurricane Forecasting

News

Some Cars Can Detect Emergency Vehicles before Drivers Do