answersLogoWhite

0

How much Would $100 in 1920

User Avatar

Wiki User

7y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What would 100 pounds in 1920 be worth today?

About £2600


How do you convert 1920 into a percent?

By multiplying it by 100


If 12inch washers cost 44 cents per pound and there are 2600 pieces in a 100 pound box how much would 1920 pieces cost?

$32.48 cents. 1920 pieces = 73.84 Lbs. at 44c X 73.84 = $32 and 48 cents.


How much would 500 pounds in 1920 be worth today?

£5,000,000


How much would a 1920 Tiffany lamp auction for?

£1200 minimum


How much would 300 pounds in 1920 be worth today?

200,000


How much would you rate the sims from 1 to 100?

100 out of 100


How much would 470 pounds in 1920 be worth in today's currency?

$1


How much is 20 5 dollar bills?

It would be $100


How much would 100 million dollars be today?

It would be 100 million dollars.


What was the average dinner check in 1920?

In 1920 a dollar bought you about 10-12 times of what you can buy with it today. On the other hand, the production and transport of foodstuffs among others is done much more efficiently (and consequently often much cheaper) than is was 100 years ago.So much depends on which restaurant food in which part of the country you would be comparing. To stay on the safe side, you might assume that the bill would be five to six times as low as it is today.


If you bought 100 dollars of NYSE in 1920 what would it be worth?

NYSE is not a stock or even a measured average. Did you mean the Dow Jones Industrial Average? That is what people typically refer to if they say the market is up or down. Dow Jones Industrial Average: Jan 2, 1920: 108.76 Sept 29, 2011: 11,153.98 So, if you bought $100 into a Dow tracking fund (not sure they existed in 1920), it would be worth about $10,255. There are two caveats, first you'd owe capital gains when you sold it and second $100 in 1920 was a lot of money, According to the difference in the CPI, $100 in 1920 is worth roughly $1000 today: Historical value of money comparison site: http://www.measuringworth.com/uscompare/