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The purchasing power of the dollar: from 1950 to today, how much was a dollar worth then?
Analyzing historical data on the dollar’s devaluation, we discover how money has gradually lost its value over the decades. In 1950, a single dollar had the purchasing power equivalent to about $13.33 today. This means that half a century ago, that currency had significantly greater buying power than it does now.
The loss of value from 1950 to 2026
In 1950, when the dollar was still a relatively stable currency, one dollar could buy goods and services worth around $13.33 today. Fifty years later, in 2000, the situation had already deteriorated: one dollar had the purchasing power of only $1.87 current dollars.
These numbers reveal a shocking reality. From 1950 to today, the dollar has lost over 92.5% of its original purchasing power, shrinking to about 7.5 cents of its initial value. From 2000 to the present, the devaluation continues: the dollar has lost nearly 47% of the value it had at the start of the millennium, retaining only 53.5% of its former purchasing power.
How inflation erodes purchasing power
Inflation is not a sporadic phenomenon but a structural trend that repeats year after year. Each new year brings further deterioration of fiat currency. This process does not stop spontaneously: it is the result of continuous money creation and the generalized rise in prices of goods and services.
The dynamic is simple but devastating in the long term. As time passes, each dollar you own today will progressively be worth less in the future. If the trend remains constant, your money will be worth about half in a few decades, considering only nominal purchasing power.
Why cash loses value over time
Holding cash long-term means accepting a systematic loss of value. As the dollar depreciates, prices of goods increase proportionally. An important exception concerns scarce, useful, highly demanded, and non-perishable assets: these tend to preserve or increase their value relative to a constantly devaluing fiat currency.
This is the fundamental reason why many analysts emphasize the importance of diversifying wealth, allocating resources toward assets that maintain or appreciate their value over time, rather than accumulating in pure cash form.