In 1998, a 27" CRT TV was $300 in 1998 dollars. Today's 32" LCD TV is $120.
Just in nominal dollars, not adjusted for inflation, the new TV costs 40% as much as the one from 1998. Then the offical CPI says $300 1998 dollars are worth around $500 2021 dollars... so that brings us down to about 24% before making any hedonistic adjustment. [Edit: And, really, we should be comparing a 32" TV from 1998. That's not in the ad, but it is plausible to imagine it costs more than any of the 27" models. Let's call it $450 just to be conservative. That gets you to around 15% w/ CPI and no hedonistic adjustment]
But the new TV has twice as many lines of resolution, a bigger screen, better color, uses a fraction as much power, is lighter and is physically smaller. So the operating cost is lower, you can put it anywhere you want, you have a bigger and nicer picture to look at. I'm sort of baffled how someone could not agree that the newer one is very clearly better.
I suspect that if you offered most people a CRT version of today's TV, nobody would take it at even half the price. That gets you to within spitting distance of 10%.
You can perform the same exercise with other size tubes, but the result is basically the same.
Not sure why downvoted, this is an important point: utility is sublinear in most dimensions of product quality. For example, a desktop computer with everything the same but 2x the CPU speed is less than 2x as useful.
Don't tell Dudley though:
>>“Today you can buy an iPad 2 that costs the same as an iPad 1 that is twice as powerful,” he said.”You have to look at the prices of all things.”
Let's take 50" TVs instead. I initially used smaller ones because I don't recall many people having TVs like that in 1998, but the 1998 ad doesn't have 32" TVs and the modern website doesn't have 27" TVs in stock.
50" is one size that Best Buy carried in both 1998 and today. So we can compare like for like.
Today's 50" LCD should be no less entertaining than a 50" CRT from 1998, right? I'm not claiming it is more entertaining, just that it isn't less. Today's 50" costs $330 at Best Buy. 1998's 50" costs $1500 at Best Buy in raw, un-adjusted dollars.
You're getting a 78% discount without making any inflation or hedonistic adjustment whatsoever. You can play pretend in fairy land and say that inflation doesn't exist... and you get to enjoy the same TV plus have spare dollars to spend on other entertainment.
Actually... maybe the the modern, cheaper TV is infinity times more entertaining. After all, a TV with nothing to watch isn't very useful. Your old TV provides little value except as a conversation piece when guests come over (if you don't enjoy free OTA content). On the other hand, with the new TV, you can spend 3x on content what you spent on the TV itself.
This kind of gets at the problem: "the 1998 ad doesn't have 32" TVs and the modern website doesn't have 27" TVs in stock". We're not talking about everyone being able to afford a better TV than before; instead, the TV size at each price and quality tier has gone up over time and people get that size whether they want it or not. A 21" TV used to be a good size for a main set, by around a decade ago you could get a 32" set of reasonable quality for a reasonable price but the 21" ones were bargin-basement with poor picture and sound quality, fast forward to today and 32" are all budget options degraded to the same poor quality (and the same resolution) as 21" ones a decade earlier, with anything smaller a niche product offering poor value. Last I heard 52" was the current tier with good-quality TVs and 42" had already started the quality slide compared to what used to be available in that size.
Also, there's a really obvious reason to think that 1998's 50" TV was not worth $1500 in raw, unadjusted dollars to the vast majority of people: almost no-one bought it at that price. In theory this principle applies to every item that used to be available with both cheaper and more expensive options but now only has the option which is more expensive: that improvement is worth less to people than the price difference when they both used to be available, or there wouldn't have been a market for the cheaper option back then.
For what it's worth, I worked at Disneyland Innoventions back in 2002 when we got early previews of consumer products that weren't on market yet, one of which was the first plasma screen TV with a built-in screensaver. When it became available to retail, it was over $7,000. The very first plasma screen at all from 1997 was originally $23,000. The color television in 1954 was about $12,000. For 15 inches.
I don't think they've gotten 1000% more entertaining, but one effect is people can have a television per room and no viewing conflicts. Back in the day we only had one television per household and you were stuck watching whatever your dad dictated most of the time.
Also, if you look at fcc historical charts (https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DA-14-672A1.pdf), check Table 3 on page 10 of that pdf, it shows expanded basic cable, or basic cable plus live regional sports, was $22.35 in 1995 and $64.41 as of 2013, but also Netflix existed by then for $7.99 a month.
I'm honestly not that sure how to feel about this. Things like assisted braking, crash zones, seatbelts, and airbags are pretty unambiguous improvements. But I'm not sure the plethora of cheap entertainment options is any kind of a net benefit, hedonic or otherwise. As a kid in the 80s, most of the time my sisters and I entertained ourselves by reading books, playing board games, building things out of legos. Maybe less immediate hedonic reward, but explicitly interactive activities made for better family bonding and active consumption rather than passive was a lot more intellectually stimulating. I can barely even pay attention to a book these days, but I still remember being 12 and the level of thought and imagination they would provoke and it was a heck of a lot more than I've ever gotten out of film or television.
I think the point of this article is that the TV you could buy for $300 in 1997 you can't now buy for $30. So the 10 times increase in quality hasn't allowed a 10 times reduction in cost of living.
Here's a Best Buy ad from 1998: https://www.chron.com/news/article/Best-Buy-ad-from-1998-sho...
Here's a Best Buy listing from today: https://www.bestbuy.com/site/insignia-32-class-n10-series-le...
In 1998, a 27" CRT TV was $300 in 1998 dollars. Today's 32" LCD TV is $120.
Just in nominal dollars, not adjusted for inflation, the new TV costs 40% as much as the one from 1998. Then the offical CPI says $300 1998 dollars are worth around $500 2021 dollars... so that brings us down to about 24% before making any hedonistic adjustment. [Edit: And, really, we should be comparing a 32" TV from 1998. That's not in the ad, but it is plausible to imagine it costs more than any of the 27" models. Let's call it $450 just to be conservative. That gets you to around 15% w/ CPI and no hedonistic adjustment]
But the new TV has twice as many lines of resolution, a bigger screen, better color, uses a fraction as much power, is lighter and is physically smaller. So the operating cost is lower, you can put it anywhere you want, you have a bigger and nicer picture to look at. I'm sort of baffled how someone could not agree that the newer one is very clearly better.
I suspect that if you offered most people a CRT version of today's TV, nobody would take it at even half the price. That gets you to within spitting distance of 10%.
You can perform the same exercise with other size tubes, but the result is basically the same.