The Problem of Money and Time (May/June 1989 | Volume: 40, Issue: 4)

The Problem of Money and Time

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Authors: John Steele Gordon

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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May/June 1989 | Volume 40, Issue 4

L.P. Hartley began his masterly novel The Go-Between with the words “The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.” No-where is this difference with the past more apparent than in the realm of getting and spending, for like most foreign countries, the past uses a money different from ours, and the historian must somehow translate its value into modern terms.

This seemingly simple imperative turns out to be one of the most intractable problems a historian faces. Indeed, there is no simple solution. But there are some helpful rules to guide the way. Let’s begin by considering a famous New York real estate deal.

In 1917, Morton F. Plant—a man who got off to a brisk start in life by inheriting his father’s railroad fortune—sold his Fifth Avenue mansion to the jewelry firm of Cartier for $1,200,000. Instead of taking the money, however, Mr. Plant took it out in trade, exchanging his house for a “two-strand, Oriental pearl necklace.”

By economic definition, the house and the necklace were of equal value at the time of the transaction, at least as far as Mr. Plant and Cartier were concerned. But today, 72 years later, the value of each has changed very considerably.

The mansion, located on the southeast corner of Fifth Avenue and Fifty-second Street and now an official New York City landmark, remains to this day both Cartier’s premier American store and one of the most desirable pieces of commercial real estate in the world. While no firm figures are possible since the building has not been sold recently, the value of Cartier’s property is certainly in excess of $20,000,000, and the firm has already sold the air rights for a very considerable sum.

Meanwhile, fate has not been nearly so kind to the value of Oriental pearls. The whereabouts of the Cartier necklace is currently unknown (at least to Cartier), but today a comparable necklace would not be worth more than $200,000. Morton Plant’s mansion, in other words, is now worth at least a hundred times that much. (Before shedding a tear for Mr. Plant, be assured that he died in bed at his new Fifth Avenue mansion the following year.)

Obviously the value of a million dollars has changed since 1917. What did $1,000,000 mean to the people living in the second decade of this century, and how can we express it in terms of today’s money? Certainly, in 1917, a man who possessed $1,000,000 was thought to be very rich indeed (Mr. Plant, worth perhaps $25,000,000, was one of the wealthiest people in the country). Today, while a million will keep the wolf comfortably away from the door, it is, alas, only garden-variety riches. There are today in America one million millionaires, and the minimum price of admission to the Forbes list of the four hundred richest Americans was no less than $225,000,000 in 1988.

One reason