Cool NASA inflation calculator

I was expecting something like a rocket to shoot up to the new level of prices seeing on how the link was to NASA. Just a basic calculator. How much have wages inflated?
 
They are using the fixed numbers. True inflation is and was much higher. Just look how rents and house prices shot up just in the timeframe that their calculator provides. Its a state's propaganda tool.
 
It's called M3. The FED doesn't report it anymore. ;)

M3 didn't have any information about prices. These calculators are approximating what a dollar could buy now versus then, not the number of them in existence.

Price is influenced by much more than just money supply.
 
M3 didn't have any information about prices. These calculators are approximating what a dollar could buy now versus then, not the number of them in existence.

Price is influenced by much more than just money supply.

M3's role / purpose is fulfilled without prices. I know what the calculators are doing. And I said; to use them as a true measure of inflation is fail.

@ Bold. Yeah which is why using CPI to measure true inflation is retarded. ;)

They average overall prices to certain sectors of the economy, then from that they get an even more general overall statistic/no. for the inflation. Inaccurate and misinformation if presented as the true inflation figures.
 
Using CPI to measure inflation is only retarded because the government repeatedly has altered the formula to hide the true costs of their fiscally irresponsible deficit spending.

Nixon separated the CPI from Headline and everyone focused on CPI instead of the headline which is often only reported as a side-note. Then Clinton came in and screwed with the CPI formula "basket" to allow substitutions-- the assumption being that when one product in the basket gets to pricey consumers will switch to a cheaper product---Walla! Inflation no longer a problem!

The CPI to this day uses Clinton's substitution formula which is crap--because of its inconsistency. The basket of goods in constantly changing so it is impossible to track the devaluation of the dollar over time as cheaper goods are substituted for price inflated ones.

Decent article here http://www.newsweek.com/id/150767
 
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