The price of stuff ...

The price of stuff ...

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Terminator X

Original Poster:

15,031 posts

204 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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We all moan about how much things cost today however I just opened an old CD only for the receipt to fall out, £12.49 for an album back in July 1991!

TX.

caelite

4,274 posts

112 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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Wait, people used to PAY for music? Man the past was wierd.

trickywoo

11,750 posts

230 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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I remember a blank 90 minute VHS tape being £10, and that was when they were cheap having come down from £50.

Wacky Racer

38,140 posts

247 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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My first VHS Ferguson video recorder was £575 in 1975.

Probably around £2500 today.

Asda were selling new ones a few years back for £40.00

imdeman87

893 posts

107 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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Conversely, we bought a 3 bed detached house in 1991 for £23k.

Allanv

3,540 posts

186 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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My first HDD in 1989 for 20MB was £500 ish

My house a 3 bed semi was £55k in 1997

LarJammer

2,237 posts

210 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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A cant comprehend how 75ml of toothpaste can cost £3.50. Thats over £45 per litre! For fecking toothpaste!

MitchT

15,850 posts

209 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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I think the point is that we moan because essentials have rocketed in price. Discretionary purchases used to be relatively expensive compared with today's prices, but you could refrain from buying those. You can't refrain from purchasing food and shelter.

MX5_Nuts

1,487 posts

107 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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LarJammer said:
A cant comprehend how 75ml of toothpaste can cost £3.50. Thats over £45 per litre! For fecking toothpaste!
This!! Really fks me off and they make TONS of the stuff at a time. I only buy it when on offer but still £2.50-£3 a time.

WestyCarl

3,240 posts

125 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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LarJammer said:
A cant comprehend how 75ml of toothpaste can cost £3.50. Thats over £45 per litre! For fecking toothpaste!
Bottled water is what gets me. It's really free, but they manage to charge up to twice the cost of petrol which gets mined from the center of the earth, transported to a refinery, processed, transported to a garage and then dispensed (at the same place they sell the "free" water!!!). Madness

98elise

26,498 posts

161 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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Wacky Racer said:
My first VHS Ferguson video recorder was £575 in 1975.

Probably around £2500 today.

Asda were selling new ones a few years back for £40.00
I remember buying a cheap one at £299 in the 80's because I could not see them getting any cheaper!

Condi

17,158 posts

171 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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MitchT said:
I think the point is that we moan because essentials have rocketed in price. Discretionary purchases used to be relatively expensive compared with today's prices, but you could refrain from buying those. You can't refrain from purchasing food and shelter.
Have they? Food, fuel, etc seem to be cheap. Cheaper than 4 or 5 years ago anyway.


Our first computer, in about 1998, cost £2k. In today's money that is £3180. A reasonable top/mid range computer today would set you back less than 25% of that.

98elise

26,498 posts

161 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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WestyCarl said:
LarJammer said:
A cant comprehend how 75ml of toothpaste can cost £3.50. Thats over £45 per litre! For fecking toothpaste!
Bottled water is what gets me. It's really free, but they manage to charge up to twice the cost of petrol which gets mined from the center of the earth, transported to a refinery, processed, transported to a garage and then dispensed (at the same place they sell the "free" water!!!). Madness
Agreed. If petrol fell out of the sky, or was on tap in your house for pennies, then petrol stations would go out of business overnight.

Goaty Bill 2

3,403 posts

119 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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WestyCarl said:
LarJammer said:
A cant comprehend how 75ml of toothpaste can cost £3.50. Thats over £45 per litre! For fecking toothpaste!
Bottled water is what gets me. It's really free, but they manage to charge up to twice the cost of petrol which gets mined from the center of the earth, transported to a refinery, processed, transported to a garage and then dispensed (at the same place they sell the "free" water!!!). Madness
Not to forget, something in the order of 60-70% of the price of petrol in the UK is tax (duty plus VAT).
The water isn't taxed at point of sale at all.

It still amazes me that people will buy bottled water.
I just can't get past knowing how badly I would be being skinned if I were to buy it.

I admit that I bought a bottle of Perrier once, back in the 70s, just to see what the fuss was about.


TwigtheWonderkid

43,327 posts

150 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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LarJammer said:
A cant comprehend how 75ml of toothpaste can cost £3.50. Thats over £45 per litre! For fecking toothpaste!
Most well know brands of toothpaste can be bought in Poundland, and that's 125ml tubes. Stop buying your toothpaste in Harrods.

My grandparents bought me a pocket calculator when I started secondary skool in 1974, and it cost £125. It didn't even have a square root button, just the basic functions. You can get a really good scientific one today for well under a fiver.




Edited by TwigtheWonderkid on Sunday 26th February 19:46


Edited by TwigtheWonderkid on Sunday 26th February 19:46

LivingTheDream

1,753 posts

179 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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Goaty Bill 2 said:
WestyCarl said:
LarJammer said:
A cant comprehend how 75ml of toothpaste can cost £3.50. Thats over £45 per litre! For fecking toothpaste!
Bottled water is what gets me. It's really free, but they manage to charge up to twice the cost of petrol which gets mined from the center of the earth, transported to a refinery, processed, transported to a garage and then dispensed (at the same place they sell the "free" water!!!). Madness
Not to forget, something in the order of 60-70% of the price of petrol in the UK is tax (duty plus VAT).
The water isn't taxed at point of sale at all.

It still amazes me that people will buy bottled water.
I just can't get past knowing how badly I would be being skinned if I were to buy it.

I admit that I bought a bottle of Perrier once, back in the 70s, just to see what the fuss was about.
Well - I guess it depends what water you mean, fizzy is fizzy so I guess people like that.

But, we buy bottled water in bulk for the home. 6-8 2 litre bottles a week I guess, costs about £2 a week.

Our tap water is awful! Even with various de hardening things in place, we will eventually get a water softener which, I hope, will help.

We have a Brita water filter but it's still awful. Even water from this causes our kettle to scale up.

The only thing drinkable is bottled and therefore, bottled water is worth the small cost.

StuTheGrouch

5,728 posts

162 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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Goaty Bill 2 said:
Not to forget, something in the order of 60-70% of the price of petrol in the UK is tax (duty plus VAT).
The water isn't taxed at point of sale at all.

It still amazes me that people will buy bottled water.
I just can't get past knowing how badly I would be being skinned if I were to buy it.

I admit that I bought a bottle of Perrier once, back in the 70s, just to see what the fuss was about.
I drink between 2 and 4 litres of sparkling water each day. San Pellegrino is my water of choice.

milu

2,351 posts

266 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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I'm pretty sure food isn't cheaper than it was 4-5 yrs ago. It's either smaller for same money or more expensive.
2 bags worth is £50 I find.

crankedup

25,764 posts

243 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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Terminator X said:
We all moan about how much things cost today however I just opened an old CD only for the receipt to fall out, £12.49 for an album back in July 1991!

TX.
No wonder bono et al are multi multi millionaires.

eldar

21,711 posts

196 months

Sunday 26th February 2017
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LivingTheDream said:
Our tap water is awful! Even with various de hardening things in place, we will eventually get a water softener which, I hope, will help.
It won't. You'll still need to drink the unsoftened.