My father was born in 1919 and his parents owned a 1916 Model T.
Over the years, my father or his parents and later him and my mother bought a 1920, 1924, 1928, 1932, 1936, 1940, 1950, 1955, 1960, and 1965 full sized Ford cars.
I can vividly remember my parents trading in the 1960 Ford for the 1965 Ford. The new Ford was about $2,500 and the 1960 was worth about $700 and the difference was $1,800.
My folks were proud their new 1965 Ford cost exactly the same $1,800 they paid for eighty acres of land (where their house was built) in 1948 but they weren’t so proud of the new 1965 Ford when the blue paint peeled off the hood.
Ford had it repainted, but it faded again.
In 1970 my mother didn’t want another Ford, so Daddy bought Mama a brand new 1970 Chevy Impala that cost $3,000, and the old Ford was only worth $500, because it was blue and the blue paint faded really bad on those, you know?
This was a $3,000 car in 1970.
My inflation calculator says $3,000 in 1970 is about $23,000 today.
$23,000 will buy a small new car today. Not a full sized Chevy, but a new car. But a new 2023 Chevy Camaro starts at $25,000.
Inflation really hasn’t been devastating for automobiles, or else we’d not see so many new ones.
Where inflation has been crippling is land prices.
I still own the 80 acres my folks paid $1,800 for in 1948.
That’s supposed to be about $22,000 today, according to the inflation calculator.
That won’t buy three acres to build a house.
The land around Bug Tussle sells for about $6,500 an acre and more.
Why, is land so expensive?
The Good Lord isn’t making any more land, but He made a bunch before he quit.
Over the years, my father or his parents and later him and my mother bought a 1920, 1924, 1928, 1932, 1936, 1940, 1950, 1955, 1960, and 1965 full sized Ford cars.
I can vividly remember my parents trading in the 1960 Ford for the 1965 Ford. The new Ford was about $2,500 and the 1960 was worth about $700 and the difference was $1,800.
My folks were proud their new 1965 Ford cost exactly the same $1,800 they paid for eighty acres of land (where their house was built) in 1948 but they weren’t so proud of the new 1965 Ford when the blue paint peeled off the hood.
Ford had it repainted, but it faded again.
In 1970 my mother didn’t want another Ford, so Daddy bought Mama a brand new 1970 Chevy Impala that cost $3,000, and the old Ford was only worth $500, because it was blue and the blue paint faded really bad on those, you know?
This was a $3,000 car in 1970.
My inflation calculator says $3,000 in 1970 is about $23,000 today.
$23,000 will buy a small new car today. Not a full sized Chevy, but a new car. But a new 2023 Chevy Camaro starts at $25,000.
Inflation really hasn’t been devastating for automobiles, or else we’d not see so many new ones.
Where inflation has been crippling is land prices.
I still own the 80 acres my folks paid $1,800 for in 1948.
That’s supposed to be about $22,000 today, according to the inflation calculator.
That won’t buy three acres to build a house.
The land around Bug Tussle sells for about $6,500 an acre and more.
Why, is land so expensive?
The Good Lord isn’t making any more land, but He made a bunch before he quit.