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- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!kepler1!andrew
- From: andrew@rentec.com (Andrew Mullhaupt)
- Newsgroups: sci.math.stat
- Subject: Re: . . . in WWII Dollars
- Message-ID: <1437@kepler1.rentec.com>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 15:53:12 GMT
- References: <92363.190800RHG@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Organization: Renaissance Technologies Corp., Setauket, NY.
- Lines: 24
-
- In article <92363.190800RHG@psuvm.psu.edu> RHG@psuvm.psu.edu writes:
- >In a book I'm writing about World War II, I refer to a number of
- >governmental purchases--but the dollar figures don't mean much
- >unless they are converted to 1992 dollars. (If an item cost $1,000
- >in 1945, how much would it cost today?) I'm sure there are charts
- >that show that kind of thing, but I can't find any in the Penn State
- >library.
- >
- >But all I need is a conversion formula. Does anyone out there have
- >one?
-
- Unfortunately, there are too many. You have to pick and choose. If you
- want a rough indicator, you can use the prices of different duration
- government debt (i.e. treasury bills, short and long bonds) as an indication
- of how people view the value of a dollar. However, you particularly mention
- purchasing power, which is often measured by pricing a standard shopping
- basket of basic goods. Energy costs are very important over the period
- you are interested in, as are metal costs, and these do quite different
- things (oil goes up and metals go down). If I were in your place, I'd
- skip the formula and look for the economist down the hall. Don't worry
- about a formula, you will probably find useful graphs in the literature.
-
- Later,
- Andrew Mullhaupt
-