If you ask most people whether life has gotten more affordable since 2000, the instinctive answer is ‘no.’ Groceries feel expensive, rent and healthcare feel punishing, and headlines about inflation haven’t helped.
Yet Mark Perry’s ‘Chart of the Century’ tells a more complicated story. Over the past 25 years, average wages have grown faster than overall inflation — meaning many Americans can buy more with each hour of work than they could in 2000. The challenge is that this progress is uneven and often invisible, especially in the everyday essentials where people feel prices most.
The most current version reports price increases from 2000 through the end of 2025 for 14 categories of goods and services, along with the average wage and overall Consumer Price Index. Here are the key findings.
- Wage growth has outpaced inflation by a significant margin (131% vs. 92.6%) from 2000 to 2025, resulting in a 20% increase in real purchasing power.
- Sharp divergence exists between sectors: Technology and tradable goods have become much cheaper, while healthcare, education, and childcare costs soared.
- Market competition and trade liberalization drive price declines, while regulated markets and limited competition drive price increases.
- Despite objective improvements in purchasing power, many consumers still feel financial pressure due to changing consumption patterns and “quality of life creep”.
- Policy challenges remain in balancing regulation with market forces, particularly in essential services like healthcare and education.
Core Economic Metrics: The Big Picture
The foundation of this analysis rests on three critical metrics that provide context for all other price trends:
| Metric | Change (2000-2025) |
|---|---|
| Consumer Price Index (CPI) | +92.6% |
| Average Hourly Income | +131% |
| Real Purchasing Power | +20% |
From January 2000 to now, the CPI for All Items has increased by over 90%. That is a big jump from its 59.6% level in 2019, when I first shared this chart.
These numbers tell a surprising story: despite widespread perceptions of economic hardship, Americans’ wages have grown significantly faster than inflation over these 25 years. This translates to a meaningful increase in real purchasing power – the ability to buy more goods and services with the same amount of work.
However, this aggregate picture masks dramatic variations across different categories of goods and services. Let’s explore these divergent trends.
The price of technology, electronics, and consumer goods — think toys and television sets — has tumbled over the past two decades. Why? These categories benefit from global competition, technological innovation, and manufacturing efficiencies.
Meanwhile, the cost of hospital stays, childcare, and college tuition, to name a few, has surged. Why? These sectors share important characteristics: they are typically non-tradable services (cannot be imported), operate in markets with limited competition, and are often subject to extensive regulation.
Below is Perry’s Chart of the Century.

via Mark Perry
Here is how to read this chart.
- Think of the CPI line as the baseline: it’s the average rate of inflation for all items combined.
- Any category’s line running far above that baseline is a “price climber” that has gotten significantly harder to afford over time.
- Any line trending well below that baseline is a “price deflator” that has become more affordable relative to your income and other prices.
Looking at the chart, the conventional wisdom holds: many ‘luxuries’ have gotten cheaper, while several everyday ‘necessities’ have become more expensive.
For context, at the beginning of 2020, food, beverages, and housing were in line with inflation. They’ve now skyrocketed above inflation, which helps to explain the unease many households are feeling right now. Since last year, they’ve increased by another 3.1% (the CPI for ALL ITEMS increased by 2.7%). College tuition and hospital services have also continued to rise relative to inflation over the past few years.
Market Dynamics: Understanding the Divergence
What explains these dramatically different price trajectories? Here are several (but not all of the) key factors:
Factors Driving Price Increases
- Government regulation creates compliance costs and barriers to entry.
- Quasi-monopolistic markets with limited price competition.
- Non-tradeable services protect from foreign competition.
- Limited technological disruption in certain service sectors.
Factors Driving Price Decreases
- Foreign competition putting downward pressure on prices.
- Technological advancement reducing production costs.
- Manufacturing optimization increases efficiency.
- Market competition forces price discipline.
- Trade liberalization expands access to global markets.
Looking at the prices that decrease the most, they’re all technologies. New technologies almost always become less expensive as we optimize manufacturing, components become cheaper, and competition increases. According to VisualCapitalist, at the turn of the century, a flat-screen TV would cost around 17% of the median income ($42,148). Since then, though, prices fell quickly. Today, a new TV typically costs less than 1% of the U.S. median income ($54,132).
Longer-term trends also matter. For example, in 2020, I asked how the coronavirus would affect prices … and the actual impact turned out far less dramatic than many feared. If you don’t look at the rise in inflation but instead the change in trajectories, very few categories were heavily affected. While hospital services have increased significantly since 2019, they were already rising. There were some immediate impacts, but they went away relatively quickly.
Another key factor is average hourly income. Since 2000, overall inflation has increased by 92%, while average hourly income has increased by 131%. This means that hourly income increased ~40% faster than prices (which indicates a 20% decrease in overall time prices). So, if your work earned 10 units of goods in 2000, it would now get you 12 units. This represents a mild increase in abundance since last year.

via Human Progress
Although 10 of the 14 items rose in nominal prices over the past 25 years, only 5 had a higher time price when accounting for increases in hourly wages. Those items were medical care services, childcare and nursery school, college textbooks, college tuition and fees, and hospital services.
So how does this show up in real life?
The Consumer Experience: Perception vs. Reality
It’s striking to look at data like that, knowing that the average household is feeling a ‘crunch’ right now.
My guess is that few consumers distinguish between perception and reality. However, feeling a crunch isn’t necessarily the same as being in a crunch.
For instance, we must account for ‘quality of life creep,’ where people tend to splurge on luxuries as their standard of living improves. With the ease of online shopping and access to consumer credit, it has become increasingly easy to make impulse purchases, leading to reduced savings and feelings of financial scarcity. This phenomenon is a function of increased consumption (rather than inflation), yet it still leaves consumers feeling like they’re struggling to make ends meet. Our sense of what’s normal has risen, and that’s hard to unlearn.
Perry’s ‘Chart of the Century’ reveals the complex relationships between inflation, consumption, and economic growth. While households may feel financial strain, the data shows that income has outpaced inflation, and technology has made many goods more affordable. Nonetheless, there is still a real sense of economic struggle, especially in these last few months.
Economic Patterns: Regulated vs. Free Markets
A clear pattern emerges when examining the relationship between market structures and price trends.
Regulated Markets (such as healthcare and education) tend to have higher prices over time, less price competition, and limited consumer choice.
Free Markets show price decreases over time, feature greater competition, and provide consumers with more options.
This pattern raises important questions about the role of regulation in various economic sectors and the balance between consumer protection and market efficiency.
With that in mind, how can policymakers address sectors experiencing significant price hikes, such as healthcare and education, without stifling innovation in tradable goods and services?
Future Outlook
Beyond all that, here are three other key trends to watch.
- AI Disruption: Telemedicine and online education could bend the cost curves for healthcare and education.
- Trade Wars: While the tariffs were just struck down by the Supreme Court, that likely doesn’t mean the end of this saga.
- Generational Shifts: Millennials prioritize experiences over goods, potentially easing service demand.
As innovation and policy evolve, it will be interesting to see if we can make essential services as dynamically competitive as consumer electronics. While America excels in many ways, we lag behind several countries in healthcare and education in terms of cost and outcomes.
I’d love to know what you think about this and how you see it playing out.
Onwards.













