Also see:
NumisWiki's - Ancient Wages and Prices
Doug Smith's - Buying Power of Ancient Coins
Edict of Diocletian Edict on Prices
We so often see the question:
"So how much would a
denarius, or
sestertius or........buy in modern goods and services?"
A common answer is along the lines of not what it would buy, but addresses wages.
A
denarius would be pay for a skilled (definition varies) laborer for one day.
Of course, in both ancient and modern times the economy varied so as to make the purchasing power of a
denarius or the modern equivalent vary as well.
My question or discussion topic is:
Wouldn't pay for for a days labor buy goods and services be pretty much stable through the last roughly 2000 years when one only includes what the
average ancient
roman could have purchased?
And even though many millions of let's say,
denarii were minted in such a society, the purchasing power would
still be more along the lines of a day's wages for a skilled worker during the U.S. Depression years, or even slightly greater in areas that were not say "boom towns" because of gold and silver mines or other temporary and artificial economies?
25 cents was a
good days pay(and less) during many years of the Depression.
Today, we would say: "25 cents? Not worth much."
But during the Depression, without listing prices for goods and services, 25 cents was a
fair day's pay and would buy a surprising amount of goods and/or services. I know that the Depression was a temporary time also, but it lasted longer than many emperors ruled.
Today, at least in the U.S., a days pay can vary from $58 and up.
So, could one fairly say as a ballpark figure: "A
denarius was worth a day's pay for a skilled laborer. That would be roughly equivalent to a $50 bill". And this at the lower end for a minimum wage 8 hour
per day worker. It would
average a
bit more, I believe.
So in today's prices at least in the U.S. A
denarius would buy (I'll use the old standbys and not include one's cable bill
car payement, ect.)
1
denarius =
A lot of
cheap wine. As much as 25 liters for cardboard box wine-the wine to drink when you are drinking more than a case.. [Smiley] More for rarer, or less for a smaller quantity.
The services of a prostitute: Wellll....$50 would indeed buy such services in many, many places.
Quality is so subjective.
A lot of baked bread. Yes. Bread is
cheap now, but so it generally was then. What with the equivalent of government subsidies.
A night's stay in an EconoLodge (an American chain of
cheap motels)
General food products:
Cheap now-so a lot-if you don't bother with
health or dietary restrictions.
The modern equivalent of a washerwoman (a coin laundry or even a drycleaners) for a fraction of that $50 dollar
denariusJeans, a shirt, and sneakers, and a pair of socks (at somewhere like Wall-Mart).
Personal defense: Since we are talking equivalents, as much as three or more quite serviceable knives as opposed to perhaps one.
They would have been more expensive in
Roman times. Metal was scarcer.
Transportation: $50 will get you a ways in a cab, think carriage, And quite a long way on a ferry(boat). A
horse, not really applicable, as a
denarius would not come close to buying a
horse, and renters tend to want them back, now and then.
Servants or bodyguards: Personal servants(employees) come higher now what with that pesky lack of
cheap slavery or you could perhaps hire free, desperate people that will not rob and kill you(maybe), but generally no.
Entertainment: Well, wine and prostitutes sort of covers that(remember cable and similar have no equivalents).
Books=scrolls or live entertainment: Books were way more expensive even if available. One
had to know how to read as well. Commraderie was
cheap then as now. Chewing the fat with the guys was and is generally free.
Entertainment in the arenas or live entertainment: Racing(gambling, sports competition) is about the same now, but the problems are the same.
Probably listening to a storyteller in the market then was
cheap or free. Throw a
quadrans in the hat.
One can buy a lottery ticket for as little as 1/50th of that modern
denarius. One could place a bet on the Greens for as little. Mind the children don't starve because of your addiction to gambling though, now as then.
So, a
denarius during the time of, say
Trajan would buy roughly the equivalent of what it would buy for a skilled laborer during the early thirties, if adjusted for value, and also for the equivalent of what a skilled laborer (let's use MacDonald's clerk-and it is a skilled job) would make today(that $50 dollar
denarius) with the exceptions of say, wine, and some foodstuffs, which would be cheaper today, long distance transportation, and
weapons being less expensive.
Today, servants would be more expensive.
Of course moderns have way more ways to spend their
money. But the basics stay pretty much the same.
A
denarius went a long way back then, if you didn't travel far, tolerated a limited diet, or need fancy
weapons, got your future servants from the exposed infants on the trash heap, and were content with a
jug of wine as opposed to a barrel, and just bet on the
chariot races or the contestants in the
arena in moderation.
Thanks in advance.
BruceBasemetal