adjusting for inflation doesn’t give you the full picture. things like car prices, college tuition, and housing prices have skyrocketed since 1955.
for example, the united states census data listing values from 1940 to 2000 (ie the cutoff was 20+ years ago and before the housing market disaster) shows that adjusted for inflation, housing prices have quadruped since 1960. there’s a link to a table containing unadjusted values. it shows that in 1950, the median household price was $7,354. in 2000, it was $119,600.
adjusting for inflation doesn’t give you the full picture. things like car prices, college tuition, and housing prices have skyrocketed since 1955.
for example, the united states census data listing values from 1940 to 2000 (ie the cutoff was 20+ years ago and before the housing market disaster) shows that adjusted for inflation, housing prices have quadruped since 1960. there’s a link to a table containing unadjusted values. it shows that in 1950, the median household price was $7,354. in 2000, it was $119,600.