Apropos of nothing . . .
I was paging through a 1965 issue of National Geographic a while back and saw an ad for a high-end Parker fountain pen.
Crafted in "solid sterling silver" with 14K gold point (probably plated, rather than solid), the pen was priced at $25.
I was struck by how much money that pen cost in 1965. A year later, when I got my first job at McDonald's, I was paid $1.10 an hour. A Parker 75 pen would have represented 22-3/4 hours of my labor. A Bic ballpoint was probably 19 cents.
According to an inflation calculator on the internet, those 25 1965 dollars would be the equivalent of $171 today. Does anybody pay $171 for a pen today? I'm sure some people do, but they probably read The Robb Report rather than Nat Geo.
Those people who did buy Parker 75s, or receive one as a gift, in 1965 had a pen that has held its value surprisingly well. According to recent sales of the pen on eBay, New In Box, or nearly new sterling Parker 75s sell for $75-200.
A new Bic ballpoint, or at least its generic equivalent, sells for about the same 19 cents as in 1965.
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