Of course, it will depend on the denomination counted (I'm assuming all 1's) and the counting speed. Using very rough estimates that I just developed, I estimate that one could maintain a rate of between $120 in ones to $140 in ones, each minute. Experienced tellers can surely go much faster than that. but given these as rates, it would take between 1,004.9 years (at $140 per minute) and 1,172.5 years (at $120 per minute).
At a rate of $200 per minute, it would take 703.5 years. None of these results would leave much time to enjoy any of it. But it's debt, not assets, right?
Now, counting at $200 per minute, how many persons would have to be on the counting team to reach 74 billion dollars in 8 hours: 770,833 tellers, plus a third of another teller. Say 770,834 tellers, to give a little wiggle room.
well it dapends how fast u count but i can count out 120 in a min so 60 billion/120=ur aunswer
Assuming it takes about 1 second to count each dollar, it would take one billion seconds, or about 31 years and 8 months.
you count one dollar a second so it would probably take you about 31 and a half years.
If you counted 1 number per second, it would take 63 years to count to 2 billion.
If you counted 1 number per second, it would take 220 years to count to 7 billion.
If you counted 1 number per second, it would take at least 220 years to count to 6.9 billion.
A billionaire is someone who has at least a billion dollars. Counting to a billion and being a billionaire have no connection.
A billion is 1,000,000,000 dollars. The answer is 1,000,000 days or 2740 years!!!
1 billion seconds / 3600 / 24 / 365.2422 = 31.69 years
If you counted at the rate of one number per second, it would take 320 trillion years to count to 10 billion trillion. It makes no difference WHAT you're counting.
If you counted 1 number per second, it would take nearly 13,000 years to count all 400 billion stars in the Star Wars galaxy.
That depends a lot how many dollars you save every year.