"1916 Sears Catalog Home"
"Mcdonald’s Menu From 1959"
"My Grandmama Just Passed Away And We Found The Hospital Bill Of When She Had My Aunt In 1957. Insurance Paid $100 So They Ended Up Paying $2.95 For Having A Baby"
"Danish Modern Furniture Ad 1962"
"Vintage Travel Ad - Hotel Las Brisas, Acapulco, Mexico - 1965"
"McDonald's Extra Value Menu 1993"
"The Bill For A Semester At Harvard, 1869: $170.42"
""Vacation Specials" - Steve Aloi Ford Ad [c.1970]"
"A Woolworth’s Menu From The 1960s When They Served Food"
"McDonald's Menu From 1925"
"Ad For Space Shoes 1962"
"Hospital Bill From When My Grandpa Blew Up A Stump With Homemade Tnt And Lost His Eye"
"1947 Hospital Bill Found Out My Parents’ Attic. Not Sure Who It’s For"
"St. Luke Hospital - 1950s"
"Vintage New Home Advertisement, Toronto With $500 Bonus!"
"My Great Grandma's Medical Bill From 1950"
"Cat's Meow Restaurant, Fort Lauderdale Florida, 1950s Menu"
"The Taco Bell Five! (1968)"
house of the price divided by the months/years of salary = real price. no way today its cheaper....
f@#k :D
price of the house divided by the months/years of salary = real price. no way today its cheaper....
There is an actual equation used for real life world wide inflation standards called the Cheeseburger, that determines how much it costs in various nations to get a Mc Donald's cheeseburger... THAT is the only food standard that the whole world uses.
Did you even use the Big Mac index? All the latest reports are that inflation is being UNDER reported for the last several years, so that means it costs more than inflation can keep up with, so you are absolutely wrong in your numbers.