13 billion USD. A dollar is a dollar irrespective of the year it was printed.
A sum of 9000 dollars in 1950 would be equal to 80,171 dollars in 2009. This is calculated on the basis of annual inflation rate of 3.78 %.
2 billion dollars
Whatever someone is willing to pay for it.
It would be worth around 9 million dollars based on inflation.
The Korean War began on June 25, 1950 and ended in July 1953. At the end of the war it is said to have cost the United States of America sixty-seven billion dollars to have financed the war.
The population of England in 1950 was 50 million people. It is estimated that by the year 2039 the population of England will reach 70 million people.
Retail prices of foods have increased significantly. Butter is one of the staple food items in most homes. In 1950 the cost of butter was $0.72.9 a pound.
6.5% of 30000 dollars = 30000*6.5/100 dollars = 1950 dollars.
The Web - 1950 Fifty Dollars Reward 1-24 was released on: USA: 13 December 1950
In 1862 the United States passed a law known as "The Legal Tender Act" as a part of this law was 'the Parity Act" which stated in relevant part that all legal tender will hold the face value of the note. So in essence a dollar in 1933, 1950 and in todays money is still worth the same because 'law' says it MUST be. The buying power of that money however does change, in 1950 a loaf of bread cost $0.14 per loaf today it would cost $2.00 per loaf (avg) - so if we use that buying power as a guide the dollar in 1950 was worth 7.5 dollars in 2009 (simplified). Source: 73D Congress 1st session report #43 (1933)
No, the world population actually increased during that period. It grew from around 1.8 billion in 1913 to approximately 2.5 billion by 1950.
average gold value in 1950 $40.25oz