Here’s an interesting series of charts that measure how many hours of work it has taken to buy various things like the S&P 500 index, an ounce of gold, or a barrel of crude oil. You could see it as an alternative to adjusting historical prices by CPI inflation. Found on Twitter, done by @TheChartmeister.

In July 2016, the average hourly earnings of a production worker according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics was $21.59 an hour. In January 1964, it was $2.50 an hour.
In July 2016, it would take roughly 100 hours of work to buy the S&P 500 index if it was in dollars. Back in 1964, it would have only taken roughly 30 hours of work.
Here are direct links to the tweets.
From our Weekly Chart Blog https://t.co/JnpGxQu8Ci pic.twitter.com/4XncX4UqYc
— The Chart Store (@TheChartmeister) August 7, 2016
From our Weekly Chart Blog https://t.co/JnpGxQu8Ci pic.twitter.com/PxYxIYxdxR
— The Chart Store (@TheChartmeister) August 7, 2016
From our Weekly Chart Blog https://t.co/JnpGxQu8Ci pic.twitter.com/cx3vbOJaIt
— The Chart Store (@TheChartmeister) August 7, 2016
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