Comments
Aqueilas t1_ivqmkpi wrote
Exactly my thought. There was no fiber cable infrastructure in the 80's
1mazuko2 t1_ivrzojo wrote
Yep what he said…I was gonna say the same.
maggiesyg t1_ivr1c0j wrote
I promise you, there were bridges and electric power lines and telephone lines in 1980 when this chart begins. Cable TV wires and cell phone towers are the only additions.
hawklost t1_ivr7qd7 wrote
Yes, but would the same bridge being built in 1980 cost the same in 2022?
Unless this adjusts for items like More power lines, bridges, houses, towers and other items like that in an area. And then also adjusts the costs of the items for inflation, this chart is t actually useful to show anything other than humans build more the longer we are around and things get more expensive over the years.
maggiesyg t1_ivrrls3 wrote
It is adjusted for inflation
Miserly_Bastard t1_ivs3flt wrote
Standard metrics of inflation abysmally fail to capture the increase in the cost of repair and replacement of buildings and infrastructure over the span of decades. Moreover, rent is included in CPI but asset values relative to rents have ballooned into the stratosphere and are not included in CPI. When a tornado blows away a house, it destroys an asset.
It actually gets worse. The CPI is full of convolutions (just Google "hedonic adjustments") rendering it meaningless beyond the span of a few years.
Bird767 t1_ivrsc1c wrote
Not unless you adjust for inflation
funderpantz t1_ivr458q wrote
Read the first line under the legend
floopy_loofa t1_ivrbfpz wrote
Yeah, we know. But a simple phone line can be spliced almost anywhere, repaired for cheap, and quick. Comparatively, a fiber line can't even be remotely fixed that fast or cheaply. Many times the line needs completely replaced which is insanely expensive and labor intensive. Infrastructure is just genuinely more expensive now than it was even in the 90's.
[deleted] t1_ivrclf5 wrote
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pyrosisflame t1_ivprki0 wrote
Is this adjusted for inflation?
USAFacts_Official OP t1_ivpsoac wrote
Yes, this is adjusted to 2021 dollars.
teslajeff t1_ivq4kne wrote
Put this on the chart
Beaverdogg t1_ivq5z25 wrote
It's on the chart.
"Frequency of billion-dollar natural disasters (2021 dollars)
teslajeff t1_ivq69gc wrote
My bad!
alpinewerks t1_ivqgo6w wrote
I missed it also 🤷♂️
Enormousface t1_ivt1om4 wrote
I too said the frog
Amorougen t1_ivtlx9a wrote
Plot it against the growth of billionaires over time!
Nanohaystack t1_ivps3h8 wrote
Yeah. Adjust it for current market price of damaged property. Shit's just probably gotten more expensive.
iliketohideinbushes t1_ivpshhj wrote
also more people densely packed in suburbs and cities
AuburnElvis t1_ivq1gom wrote
Also more stuff being built.
octagonlover_23 t1_ivue6us wrote
Exactly this.
AuburnElvis t1_ivup1bu wrote
Yeah. Say I'm a developer and I built a building last year worth $10M and I build another one this year. If I get a disaster that wipes them both out, that's $20M lost. If the same disaster had occurred a year ago, my losses would have been $10M, not $20M simply because I hadn't built the second building yet.
Korvun t1_ivr3f93 wrote
The answer is no. 90% of the infrastructure that exists today didn't exist in the 1980s. The frequency of storms is not increasing, but the amount of expensive shit in their path has increased exponentially.
RandomJerk2012 t1_ivraj56 wrote
Unless you think this chart represents China, that statement is wrong on so many levels
Korvun t1_ivsbewg wrote
You could give an example. That would be helpful and not reductive...
funderpantz t1_ivr4jbz wrote
"90% of the infrastructure that exists today didn't exist in the 1980s"
Wtf lmao
Korvun t1_ivsbniz wrote
High speed internet lines, much of the expanded power grid, additional roads, buildings, homes, etc. And that doesn't even consider the increased property value of the area. A home worth 80k in 1980 is selling for 480k today. Or do you think 1980 Miami is exactly the same as 2022 Miami?
[deleted] t1_ivtbznp wrote
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CausticNox t1_ivps8wp wrote
Does this count inflation and population increases in high-risk areas? I would think more people = more property to be damaged.
USAFacts_Official OP t1_ivptrhk wrote
This doesn't 100% answer your question, but since damage to homes, businesses, and government buildings goes into these estimates, then it's likely a safe assumption that places with more population will have more of these structures and higher costs. This is from the article:
>The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is responsible for calculating the costs of individual natural disasters. There are three main categories of direct or indirect costs that go into these estimates. These include physical damage to homes, businesses and government buildings, damage to property inside these buildings, and the costs associated with businesses being shut down or people losing their homes.
>
>The cost estimates don’t include environmental damages, any physical or mental healthcare costs, or larger supply chain impacts. The government also doesn’t attempt to put a price tag on the lives lost during a disaster.
>
>Because of the way disaster costs are calculated, the estimated totals are considered conservative evaluations. The true costs associated with natural disasters are difficult to capture due to the lack of immediate data and the hard-to-measure long-term costs.
And to answer the inflation question, the data here is adjusted for 2021 dollars.
Poke-Party t1_ivr4wlb wrote
As someone that is responsible for entering the some of the weather related data that goes into these figures I can tell you these numbers are very much conservative estimates. Many times we do not know the details of structures that are damaged and many times do not even hear of all the damage that occurs. Most of the time I am just trying to aim for the right order of magnitude but almost always stay toward the lower end of what seems reasonable as an estimate.
funderpantz t1_ivr4aq5 wrote
Read the first line under the legend
curious-but-spurious t1_ivqpi8v wrote
Argh. Sorry to gripe but this should be columns instead of bars. Time should proceed from left to right to reveal a more striking pattern.
Wargoatgaming t1_ivqravw wrote
Maybe include Earthquakes.
This will act as a control to help answer two competing theories:
- Disasters are getting more expensive
Or
- There are (more/worse) weather related disasters
USAFacts_Official OP t1_ivprm2e wrote
Source: National Centers for Environmental Information
Tools: Datawrapper, Illustrator
Is the number of major natural disasters increasing? More data here.
OkSpot2437 t1_ivr4fkr wrote
Doesnt account for the fact of the amount of houses and buildings that have been built in the last 40 years. Areas where tornadoes and severe storms hit would've been empty barren land, now are developments.
You need to adjust for that a data. You need to adjust for the porpotion of land that is occupied by buildings/structures and unoccupied land.
​
If you can account for that, your data is flawed and mispresentative of the truth.
mrWizzardx3 t1_ivr79s2 wrote
And beach-shore property/population have only grown in the last 40 years. More people, more infrastructure, higher property values to damage.
Ginger_Ninja247 t1_ivpzeh0 wrote
Or are costs being inflated by insurance companies?
GandalfTheBored t1_ivqtmjp wrote
It could mean there are more disasters, but it could also mean that there is just more spending on disasters in general. As some of the other comments have stated, our infrastructure has changed in 40 years and the gov could be protecting that investment by spending more when a disaster strikes.
J_aner t1_ivqugxu wrote
Q: Did nothing major occur in 1987?
dancingsteveburns t1_ivqo2ll wrote
I think more people need to ask if this was adjusted for inflation
SpiderFarter t1_ivr3x13 wrote
Also there is much more development in coastal areas making tropical storms and hurricanes more destructive.
[deleted] t1_ivrvik2 wrote
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[deleted] t1_ivprr4x wrote
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[deleted] t1_ivpyp6y wrote
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MallardDrake-_- t1_ivqj49v wrote
I wonder how a frequency of inflation chart would look like placed over this
[deleted] t1_ivr28g2 wrote
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chickenmantesta t1_ivr2u9f wrote
When I see a viz like this I wonder if investing in insurance companies is smart or foolish.
Smooth_Imagination t1_ivr3tmn wrote
lives lost is though essentially at or near an all time low (strange but it has been declining over decades). The damage tracks with how much stuff there is to get damaged and claimed against. I assume that is what is being reported here, insurance claims? Is it inflation adjusted? Still 2022 looks like it was a worse year than usual and its half way through on that.
structee t1_ivr4khk wrote
It's already out of date. Ian did $60+ billion dollars
calguy1955 t1_ivrbx6s wrote
It interesting how we think we are so much more advanced than previous generations. Engineers and contractors designed and built the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge from scratch in three years in the 1930s. No computers, just slide rules. When they needed to replace 1/2 of it in the 2000s it took 9 years and went 2500% over budget.
ParticularlyFriendly t1_ivrlf5q wrote
Is this adjusted for inflation?
mehnimalism t1_ivrqww5 wrote
More and more data tables with misleading or favorably truncated data.
Ignore inflation, ignore changes to infrastructure technology, choose $1B as a binary cutoff instead of total dollar amounts.
Lies, damn lies, single dependent variable data tables.
[deleted] t1_ivtzmft wrote
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necro_owner t1_ivqctqc wrote
Is it adjusted for the fact that infrastructure are more expansive? I wouldn't want to be the one to point out, Bridge... and Power Line and you know any service infrastrusture... that cost billion to build and didn't exist in the 1900s