What is $100.00 Worth where you Live ?

jeff of pa

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The best places to get bang for your buck?

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Infographic: The Value of $100 in Each U.S. State and County
 

I don't know if it's worth $96.90 in Virginia. It goes to fast too record the speed it leaves.
 

Good ole n.y.:censored:
 

Darn, my $100 is worth the 3rd lowest in the nation - only $86.66 :(
 

Its too fuzzy to read clearly, but $88 & change...

A tank of gas for my Thunderchicken and a six pac...:thumbsup:
 

Its too fuzzy to read clearly, but $88 & change...

A tank of gas for my Thunderchicken and a six pac...:thumbsup:

Fuzzy ? try clicking on it.

Or cup of coffee and 6 hours to sober up :occasion14:
 

Woo Hoo , I am rich. Oh wait a minute, is there anybody willing to buy my hundreds for $111.37 a piece? It comes in like a snail and leaves at the speed of light.
 

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$110.25.... Like living here. No state income tax also.
 

one case of beer...

or

one gas fill up...

or

pizza for two and a few beers each

:censored:
 

Can you see the trend? Pretty easy to see what's happening................:BangHead:
 

Two tanks of petrol or 1/5th my monthly rent or around 24 pizzas if I get the double special or 3 cartons of smokes depending on which brand or 12 to 24 air tank refills or a single date with my girlfriend at a good place with drinks after at a club
 

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From rents to haircuts, Americans start to feel price hikes

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Apartment rents are up. So are prices for restaurant meals, haircuts, gym memberships and a cup of coffee.
For American consumers who have become used to flat or even falling prices for several years, an unfamiliar sight has emerged in many corners of the economy: Inflation is ticking up.
The price increases remain modest. And in many cases, they're canceled out by price declines for other items that are keeping overall inflation historically low.
Yet the stepped-up price tags for a range of consumer items are the largest since the Great Recession ended six years ago. They actually reflect a healthier economy: Many businesses have finally grown confident enough to pass their own higher costs on to consumers without fear of losing customers. Employers have added nearly 5.6 million jobs the past two years, allowing more people to absorb higher prices.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/rents-haircuts-americans-start-feel-165500571.html
 

Interesting ... $114 in Arkansas and $115 in Mississippi ... two lowest wage areas in the U.S.

Shucks, Arkansas still hasn't fully recovered from the Great Depression of the 1930's ... and I got that information from ESD manager in 1995. (ESD = Employment Security Division = Unemployment office)
 

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