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"George, Very interesting food comparison chart! Thanks. Some of us eat that stuff up. Food qua food rather than specifics like "a Delmonico steak"
is an exception to normal inflation rules because of changes in supply and
importing, distribution, quality, productivity, expectation, and genuine This becomes noticeable when comparing food with other daily expenses. For example, this comparison of costs in Charlottesville between 1961 and 2001. (Editor's note: These 1961 costs have been plugged into an online CPI calculator to compare what they should cost according to inflation with what they actually cost now. The inflated price is in italics after the actual price.) My 1961 rental cottage at The Riggory on Story Point Rd. *$431.94 Gasoline * $3.74 New plain car like a Plymouth *$14,397.99 UVa tuition was around $1,500 per semester then *$ 8638.80 A quality Eljo's Harris Tweed top coat, jacket, or suit *$ 431.94 A low-cost decent nutritious meal *$17.28 It's fascinating that a filling meal stayed where it was these 40 years by changing its content. That was not true of the 40 years before that, where a multi-course sit-down meal in town typically cost $1 or less in 1921. The going wage in Charlottesville for low-end labor in 1961 (as I saw it) was $1/hr. That's what WCHV paid it's air staff when Bob Walker managed it, and me. It took 3 hours work to buy a $3 meal or 1/13 of a 40-hour week. A single person was broke and out of gas after eating 13 meals." Rey Barry (electronic mail, Feb 28, 2001)
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