Hans Rosling spent his life not only
understanding global health and how
things were improving, but sharing that
in this fun clear way.
When some people think about the world and its future
they panic! My name is Hans Rosling,
I'm a statistician that no, no, no, no,
don't switch off!
He would compare Sweden in the past with some of the poor countries today.
He would show very important insights about how things have changed
and that's culminated in this book called Factfulness.
It's a collaboration between him and his son Ola, and daughter-in-law Anna.
He was always criticizing the word developed and developing,
but for the first time in this book he teaches you a
categorization of four tiers that is
super helpful and associates it with things
like tier one, no bike. Tier two, bike. Tier
three, some cars in the picture.
Tier four, a lot of cars, too many cars. You can actually call into your head a set of
pictures that Anna in particular has
made about oh that's your house, that's
your kitchen, that's your toilet, at those
four levels of wealth and that helps you
understand that the average person is
getting a lot wealthier and he helps you
frame whenever a plane falls out of
the sky versus other deaths,
it gets ridiculously more coverage.
The things that cause that distortive effect
of news, he's putting it on to the
individual to step back and have a
certain framework that helps you slot in
the news.
This is one of the most educational books I've ever read. It covers a space that it's not easy to go learn about.
The world would be better if literally
millions of people read the book. I give it
my highest recommendation.
