Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/11/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 11:57 PM 11/15/97 +0000, dannyg1@IDT.NET wrote: >> Patrick wrote: > >> <<<CDN$90 in 1967 was US$81 (exchange rate then was $0.90CDN/US). >> Inflation from 1967 until today (as measured by U.S. CPI) has been a factor >> of 4.83, meaning that those US$81 had the buying power of US$391.23 today. >> At the current exchange rate of CDN$1.00 = US$0.73, that's >> CDN$535.93.<<<<<<< > >Ok, So why does Conde Naste still pay the same $350 as a standard rate on an >assignment. Same amount in '68. Now how does the effective rate add up? And what >does that do to the buying power value when faced with a predicament like Ted's? I think this means that photography for Conde Nast no longer pays very well. Presumably they have discovered that they don't have to pay very well at all, because there are not enough photography jobs for all the people who want to make their living at photography and can do a passably good job at the sort of photography that Conde Nast buy. I would be surprised if photography in the U.S. paid as well as it used to for most photographers: median wages in the United States have declined by quite a bit since the seventies. Often these statistics are glossed over in two ways: first by stating household income instead of individual income (but nowadays many more households have two wage earners than before), and second by stating mean income instead of median income. Mean wages have indeed increased, but that's only because the wealthiest part of the populace are making much more money than they used to. The lower 70% or so of Americans earn lower wages than they used to. It seems likely to me that this would be the case in many other countries in the first world as well, because the causes are macroeconomic. So possibly Leicas are less affordable for many people than they used to be. But if you compare their price to that of a standard basket of goods (which is all the usual measure of inflation, the CPI, tells us), they're not much more expensive than they were in the 60's, if at all. - -Patrick