Asking
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

Let’s assume 1960 (JFK election) was the last “good year” in the USA. What has actually happened with inflation since?



Photo above - The good old days. Was 1960 the last "normal" year in America? You could get a newspaper for 10 cents.

I get 100 spam pieces a day ranting about inflation in America. This is a lot, but I couldn't say how much the spam rate has increased.

So I did the next best thing: I used the official US government dollar inflation website (link below) to calculate what happened to the US dollar since 1960. It’s big number, and a round one: 999% inflation. Something that cost $1 in 1960 theoretically costs $11 today. According to the US government. They wouldn't lie to us, would they?

I decided to check the online inflation calculator against some real-world purchases. If you want to have a cheerful and happy day, please don’t read any further.

1 – F150 pickup. America’s best-selling vehicle. According to several websites, this stickered for $4,000 in 1960. The average sale price in 2025 was $60,100. You could pay more – a lot more – for the nice ones, but let’s stick to average. The F150 price increased by 1,500%. Way more than the official 999% inflation rate. In Ford's defense, let me concede that the 2025 models can tow more and have bigger tires. But still . . .

2 – College Tuition. No, I am NOT going to cite “Harvard” because nobody you know actually went there. Let’s use Arizona State University instead. America’s largest public university. In 1960, tuition was $186. Not a misprint - $186 a semester for in-state students. In 2025 a semester (full 6 course hours) would be $5,416. Without dorm, meal plan, or parking. Still, that doesn’t look bad next to Harvard. However the ASU single semester price increase is THREE THOUSAND PERCENT. For a government run education. I don’t think this kind of stuff ever makes it into the official CPI data.

3 – Appendectomy – This one is especially tricky. Hospital costs are all over the map, as are hospitals. Best I could come up with: $418 in 1960 (before insurance), including a week’s stay in a hospital room for recovery. Today’s cost seems to average $20,000. How long you get to stay in that room varies too, but 1-2 days if there are no complications is the norm. Price increase: 5,000 percent – 5 times the official CPI inflation rate. I warned you to stop reading, didn’t I? I doubt putting the government in charge of hospitals will rein in medical inflation, after seeing what they did to college tuition.

4 – Grab bag – local costs may vary: Big Mac, up 1,400%. Converse sneakers – 2,000%. Washington post single copy – up from 10 cents to $3 (3000%)

Median US income for 1960 was $3,000. Today it’s 1,800% higher: $53,010. But we all feel poor, unless our last name is Musk, Bezos, or Swift.

As I said at the beginning – the official government data could be completely made up BS. How would we even know? And what did we expect from a bunch of guys who borrowed $38 trillion in our name which they never intend to repay?

I’m just sayin’ . . .


Inflation Calculator | Find US Dollar's Value From 1913-2026
Easily calculate how the buying power of the U.S. dollar has changed from 1913 to 2026. Get inflation rates and U.S. inflation news.
www.usinflationcalculator.com www.usinflationcalculator.com
Top | New | Old
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
America’s largest public university. In 1960, tuition was $186.

I attended the top-ranked public university at that time, and there was no tuition for in-state students. Only a $50 incidental fee for campus health care, student union, sports games. I lived in a student-owned and run housing co-operative where room and board cost $50/month plus 5 hours of work a week. Having an educated workforce was a primary goal of the State and supported by tax-payers; rather than seen as another predatory way to shackle people with debt they will find difficult to ever repay. Universities were seen as educational institutions where teaching was seen as the primary product and research a sideline to recruit top faculty and graduate students; rather than research & product development being the primary business and teaching an inconvenient add on.

An inflation in cost and a deflation in education.
1490wayb · 56-60, M
without college degree, many large families could easily thrive on just a single income until 1990. i was barely able to support myself 1984-2023 when i retired. i am SOOOOO grateful i had no one to support!! my highest gross income was only $40k the last full year WITH overtime
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@1490wayb kudos to your frugality.

those were the days when people didn't feel compelled to buy 3,000 sf mini-mansions, vacation in the caribbean every year, etc.
Wonder what I could sell my 1960 F150 for today?
Mine has no rust, no modification, all original equipment, 325K miles, column shift of course. I live in western SC keep it washed and waxed. Park it in the barn nd drive it most every day.



@SusanInFlorida
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@jackjjackson whitewall tires. you don't see that anymore.
You know it. Hard to keep clean. @SusanInFlorida

 
Post Comment