Looking
To The Next 50 Years
What
can we expect in the next 50 years? Can we look at our
past
history and predict the future from that? Let's do a little
statistical comparisons and see what we can come up with.
In
the mid 50's when the minimum wage was begun, it started
out
at .50 cents per hour. Today the minimum wage is $5.25
per hour,
a ten fold increase. Projecting that over the next 50
years with
approximately the same inflation rates gives you a minimum
wage of
better than $50.00 per hour, with a 40 hour work week,
that will give
you over $110,000.00 per year minimum wage. Whew!!!
What
about your purchasing power? In the 50's you could buy
a
"basic" new car for $1,500.00 to $2,000.00.
The same "basic" car
today will cost $15,000.00 to 20,000.00, a tenfold increase
in price,
staying with the increase in minimum wage. To project
that over the
next 50 years will put the price of your "basic"
auto at
$150,000.00 to $200,000.00.
What
about housing? I remember some friends buying a new
2 bedroom brick home in 1960 for $15,000.00. That same
size
house today will cost between $100,000.00 and $150,000.00,
depending on the location, a seven to ten fold increase.
Let's take
the lower rate and projecting that ahead will give you
a cost of
$700,000.00 for a simple 2 bedroom brick home.
What hasn't gone up so drastically? Most groceries have
gone up
only three fold to five fold, with a few items going up
more, making
groceries the best buy on the market. Maybe that is why
so many
of us are overweight, have high cholesterol and heart
disease.
We
have taken a look at the next 50 years based on a historical
repeat
of the past 50 years, but history also gives us a totally
different scenero. Let's go back 70 years instead of just
50 years.
This takes us back to the stock market crash of '29.
This means going back to ground zero and starting
everything over from scratch.
So,
which will it be? History gives us choices, but will we
make the
right one. The world, humanity, is in a constant flux,
nothing stands
still. Do we go forward at a slow even pace, rush forward
at breakneck
speed, slide backward slowly, or go crashing to the bottom
all at once?
The
ideal situation to me would be what I call the rocking
chair effect,
that is, to go forward slightly, then slide back a little
and then go forward
again, making small gains over a longer period of time.
John
Watson

John
is editor of The Common Sense Newsletter which you can
read
online at: http://mysite.com/commonsense or subscribe
by email
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body. You may contact John direct at: jmjwwatson1@juno.com
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