Difference between revisions of "980: Money/Prices in tables"

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__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__
*Here below are five sections with tables listing the prices of several items in [[980: Money]].
+
Below are five tables listing the prices of the items in [[980: Money]].
*This is still work in progress.
 
**[[980: Money/Prices in tables#Dollars|Dollars]]
 
**[[980: Money/Prices in tables#Thousands|Thousands]]
 
**[[980: Money/Prices in tables#Millions|Millions]]
 
**[[980: Money/Prices in tables#Billions|Billions]]
 
**[[980: Money/Prices in tables#Trillions|Trillions]]
 
  
{{Incomplete | ''So'' disorganized. If you can organize this, please do. Many items are missing from the Billions and Trillions sections. Also we need someone to double-check the values, please.}}
+
{{incomplete| Many items are missing from the Billions section. If you can organize the Millions, Billions and Trillions sections please do.   Also we need someone to double-check the values.}}
 
==Dollars==
 
==Dollars==
 +
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
  ! Category
 
  ! Category
Line 214: Line 209:
 
  | $5419.97
 
  | $5419.97
 
  |}
 
  |}
 +
</div>
  
 
==Thousands==
 
==Thousands==
 
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
 
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
===Typical household net worth by head of household’s age===
 
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
! 1984 !! Age !! 2009
+
! Category
|-
+
! Item
| $11,680
+
! Price
| <35 years
+
|-
| $3,710
+
! rowspan="6"|Typical household net worth by head of household’s age in 1984
|-
 
| $72,090
 
| 35-44 years
 
| $40,140
 
|-
 
| $115,060
 
| 45-54 years
 
| $103,040
 
|-
 
| $149,240
 
| 55-64 years
 
| $164,270
 
|-
 
| $122,100
 
| >65 years
 
| $172,820
 
|}
 
===Raising a child to age 17===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Life class !! Price
+
  | <35 years
 +
| $11,680
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Upper income || $302,860
+
  | 35-44 years
 +
  | $72,090
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Middle income || $206,920
+
  | 45-54 years
 +
| $115,060
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Lower income  || $150,380
+
  | 55-64 years
|}
+
| $149,240
 
 
===Vacation package from New England===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Trip !! Price
+
  | >65 years
 +
| $122,100
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | All-inclusive one-week trip for two to St. Lucia resort (incl. flights) || $3,204
+
  ! rowspan="6"|Typical household net worth by head of household’s age in 2009
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Twenty week-long Hawaiian vacations || $136,020
+
  | <35 years
|}
+
| $3,710
===Typical trip from US West Coast===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Trip !! Price
+
  | 35-44 years
 +
| $40,140
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Typical week-long Hawaii trip for two (incl. flights) || $6,801
+
  | 45-54 years
 +
| $103,040
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Typical weekend Hawaii trip for two (incl. flights) || $2,863
+
  | 55-64 years
|}
+
| $164,270
===School Prices===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! School !! Price
+
  | >65 years
 +
| $172,820
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Estimated one-year Hogwarts cost (incl. tuition) || $43,000
+
  ! rowspan="4"|Raising a child to age 17
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Seven-year Hogwarts degree || $301,000
+
  | Upper income
 +
| $302,860
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Average community college tuition || $10,340  (One year $2,580)
+
  | Middle income
  |-
+
  | $206,920
| Average in-state university tuition || $28,920 (One year $7,230)
 
|}
 
===Income per capita===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Country !! Price
+
  | Lower income 
 +
| $150,380
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | United States 2005 per capita income || $32,360
+
  !rowspan="5"|Vacations
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Switzerland 2005 per capita income || $29,910
+
  | All-inclusive one-week trip for two to St. Lucia resort from New England (incl. flights)
 +
| $3,204
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Germany 2005 per capita income || $27,550
+
  | Twenty week-long Hawaiian vacations
 +
| $136,020
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | UK 2005 per capita income || $23,240
+
  | Typical week-long Hawaii trip for two from US West Coast (incl. flights)
 +
| $6,801
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | France 2005 per capita income || $16,400
+
  | Typical weekend Hawaii trip for two from US West Coast incl. flights)
 +
| $2,863
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | China 2005 per capita income || $3,540
+
  !rowspan="5"|School Prices
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Brazil 2005 per capita income || $5,540
+
  | Estimated one-year Hogwarts cost (incl. tuition)
|}
+
| $43,000
===Houses===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  | Seven-year Hogwarts degree
 +
| $301,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Small rural house || $100,000
+
  | Average community college tuition
 +
| $10,340  (One year $2,580)
 +
|-
 +
| Average in-state university tuition
 +
| $28,920  (One year $7,230)
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Typical new home || $224,910
+
  !rowspan="8"|Income per capita (2005)
|}
 
 
 
===Health===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  | United States 2005 per capita income
 +
| $32,360
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Average individual health insurance annual premium || $5,430
+
  | Switzerland 2005 per capita income
 +
| $29,910
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Cancer treatment including chemo || $117,260
+
  | Germany 2005 per capita income
|}
+
| $27,550
===Annual Household Costs===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  | UK 2005 per capita income
 +
| $23,240
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | A daily pack of cigarettes for a year (NJ) || $3,050
+
  | France 2005 per capita income
 +
| $16,400
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | One Starbucks latte per day || $1.820
+
  | China 2005 per capita income
 +
| $3,540
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Average smartphone annual cost || $1,320
+
  | Brazil 2005 per capita income
 +
| $5,540
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Annual cost of car ownership || $3,650
+
  !rowspan="3"|Houses
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Typical annual household spending || $5,650
+
  | Small rural house
 +
| $100,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Average household CC debt || $9,960
+
  | Typical new home
 +
| $224,910
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Annual cost to carry that debt || $2,090
+
  !rowspan="3"|Health
  |}
+
|-
 
+
| Average individual health insurance annual premium
===Typical annual housing cost for various cities===
+
| $5,430
{| class="wikitable sortable"
+
|-
 +
| Cancer treatment including chemo
 +
| $117,260
 +
|-
 +
!rowspan="8"|Annual Household Costs
 +
|-
 +
| A daily pack of cigarettes for a year (NJ)
 +
| $3,050
 +
|-
 +
| One Starbucks latte per day
 +
| $1,820
 +
|-
 +
| Average smartphone annual cost
 +
| $1,320
 +
|-
 +
| Annual cost of car ownership
 +
| $3,650
 +
  |-
 +
| Typical annual household spending
 +
| $5,650
 +
|-
 +
| Average household CC debt
 +
| $9,960
 +
|-
 +
| Annual cost to carry that debt
 +
|$2,090
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! City !! Price
+
  !rowspan="13"|Typical annual housing costs
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | NYC || $25,416
+
  | NYC
 +
| $25,416
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | San Francisco || $21,888
+
  | San Francisco
 +
| $21,888
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Boston || $18,216
+
  | Boston
 +
| $18,216
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Los Angeles || $17,640
+
  | Los Angeles
 +
| $17,640
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Washington DC || $16,380
+
  | Washington DC
 +
| $16,380
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Chicago || $13,664
+
  | Chicago
 +
| $13,664
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Worcester || $12,456
+
  | Worcester
 +
| $12,456
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Houston || $11,888
+
  | Houston
 +
| $11,888
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Minneapolis || $10,908
+
  | Minneapolis
 +
| $10,908
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Detroit || $10,080
+
  | Detroit
 +
| $10,080
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Salt Lake City || $9,108
+
  | Salt Lake City
 +
| $9,108
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Scranton || $8,604
+
  | Scranton
|}
+
| $8,604
 
 
===Prince William and Kate Middleton===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  !rowspan="4"|Prince William and Kate Middleton's Wedding
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding cake || $78,000
+
  | Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding cake
 +
| $78,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Kate Middleton's wedding dress || $350,000
+
  | Kate Middleton's wedding dress
 +
| $350,000
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  |Flower cost for Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding || $800,000
+
  | Flower cost for Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding
  |}
+
  | $800,000
 
 
===Value of an investment of $1,000/year===
 
(NOT changing with inflation) for 30 years at 5% annual interest:
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Time !! Value of investment !! Real value
+
  !rowspan="10"|Value of an investment of $1,000/year
 +
(NOT accounting for inflation) for 30 years with 5% annual interest
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1 year || $1,000 ||
+
  | 1 year
 +
| $1,000
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | 5 years || $5,526 ||
+
  | 5 years
 +
| $5,526
 
  |-   
 
  |-   
  | 10 years || $12,850 ||
+
  | 10 years
 +
| $12,850
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 15 years || $21,580 ||
+
  | 15 years
 +
| $21,580
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 20 years || $33,070 ||
+
  | 20 years
 +
| $33,070
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | 25 years || $47,730 ||
+
  | 25 years
 +
| $47,730
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 30 years || $66,440 || $27,370
+
  | 30 years
 +
| $66,440
 +
|-
 +
| 30 years ($30,000 saved in mattress)
 +
| $30,000
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | 30 years ($30,000 saved in mattress) || $30,000 || $12,360
+
  | 30 years ($1,000/yr at 4% real return (long-term stock + divident average)
 +
| $56,080
 +
|-
 +
!rowspan="3"|Value of investment (accounting for inflation)
 +
|-
 +
| 30 years
 +
| $27,370
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | 30 years ($1,000/yr at 4% real return (long-term stock + divident average) || $56,080 ||
+
  | 30 years ($30,000 saved in mattress)
|}
+
| $12,360
 
 
===Average Vehicle Costs===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Price
+
  !rowspan="4"|Average Vehicle Costs
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Average used car || $8,910
+
  | Average used car
 +
| $8,910
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Average new car || $27,230
+
  | Average new car
 +
| $27,230
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | High-end bicycle || $1,500
+
  | High-end bicycle  
|}
+
| $1,500
 
 
===Total cost to buy and own selected vehicles for five years===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Car !! Price !! If gas were $10/gallon
+
  !rowspan="15"|Total cost to buy and own selected vehicles for five years
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Honda Insight || $27,874 ||
+
  | Honda Insight
 +
| $27,874
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | Toyota Prius || $38,771 || $48,990
+
  | Toyota Prius
 +
| $38,771
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Jeep Patriot || $35,425 ||
+
  | Jeep Patriot
 +
| $35,425
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Honda Fit || $28,745 || $45,233
+
  | Honda Fit
 +
| $28,745
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | BMW Z4 || $61,312 ||
+
  | BMW Z4
 +
| $61,312
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Ford Explorer || $45,524 || $69,076
+
  | Ford Explorer
 +
| $45,524
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Toyota Camry || $34,679 ||
+
  | Toyota Camry
 +
| $34,697
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | smart fortwo || $29,629 || $45,058
+
  | smart fortwo
 +
| $29,629
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Honda CR-V || $35,183 ||
+
  | Honda CR-V
 +
| $35,183
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Chevy Volt || $42,180 || $50,612
+
  | Chevy Volt
 +
| $42,180
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Hyundai Sonata || $34,644 ||
+
  | Hyundai Sonata
 +
| $34,644
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Ford F-150 || $48,734 || $77,111
+
  | Ford F-150
 +
| $48,734
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Nissan Cube || $29,383 ||
+
  | Nissan Cube
 +
| $29,383
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Porsche 911 || $91,590 ||
+
  | Porsche 911
  |}
+
| $91,590
 
+
|-
===Typical annual household income===
+
!rowspan="7"|Total cost to buy and own selected vehicles for five years if gas were $10/gallon
{| class="wikitable sortable"
+
|-
 +
| Toyota Prius
 +
| $48,990
 +
|-
 +
| Honda Fit
 +
| $45,233
 +
|-
 +
  | Ford Explorer
 +
| $69,076
 +
|-
 +
| smart fortwo
 +
| $45,058
 +
|-
 +
| Chevy Volt
 +
| $50,612
 +
|-
 +
| Ford F-150
 +
| $77,111
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Percentile !! Income
+
  !rowspan="8"|Typical annual household income
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Bottom 20% || $10,200
+
  | Bottom 20%
 +
| $10,200
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | Second 20% || $24,800
+
  | Second 20%
 +
| $24,800
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | Middle 20% || $44,400  
+
  | Middle 20%
 +
| $44,400  
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | Fourth 20% || $76,100
+
  | Fourth 20%
 +
| $76,100
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | Top 10% || $201,100
+
  | Top 10%
 +
| $201,100
 +
|-
 +
| Top 1%
 +
| $822,000
 +
|-
 +
| Top 1/500th
 +
| $2,080,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Top 1% || $822,000
+
  !rowspan="6"|Median US household income
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Top 1/500th || $2,080,000
+
  | Median US household income
|}
+
  | $51,570
 
 
===Median US household income===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
! Item !! Price
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Median US household income || $51,570
+
  | After-tax
 +
| $39,170
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | After-tax || $39,170
+
  | Taxes
 +
| $12,100
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Taxes || $12,100
+
  | Total lifetime income from ages 25-65 at $50,000/year after 25% taxes (including Social Security)
 +
| $1,500,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Total lifetime income from ages 25-65 at $50,000/year after 25% taxes (including Social Security) || $1,500,000
+
  | Cost per household served by US Rural Utilities Service program to expand broadband access
 +
| $359,790
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Cost per household served by US Rural Utilities Service program to expand broadband access || $359,790
+
  !rowspan="13"|If I had $1000000 (Cost of the items the singer in "If I had $1000000" would buy in order to win your love: $263,330)
|}
 
 
 
===If I had $1000000===
 
Cost of the items the singer in "If I had $1000000" would buy in order to win your love: $263,330
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Item !! Price
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Furniture || $21,160
+
  | Furniture
 +
| $21,160
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Plymouth Reliant || $3,000
+
  | Plymouth Reliant
 +
| $3,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Tree fort || $15,000
+
  | Tree fort
 +
| $15,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Llama || $2,120
+
  | Llama
 +
| $2,120
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Joseph Merrick's remains || N/A (Held in Royal London Hospital collection and not available for purchase)
+
  | Joseph Merrick's remains
 +
| N/A (Held in Royal London Hospital collection and not available for purchase)
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | House || $224,820
+
  | House
 +
| $224,820
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Tiny fridge || $99.08
+
  | Tiny fridge
 +
| $99.08
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Gourmet pre-wrapped sausages (2) || $34.48
+
  | Gourmet pre-wrapped sausages (2)
 +
| $34.48
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | Kraft Dinner (two double servings) || $3.06
+
  | Kraft Dinner (two double servings)
 +
| $3.06
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Expensive ketchup || $10.75
+
  | Expensive ketchup
 +
| $10.75
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Faux fur coat || $198.00
+
  | Faux fur coat
 +
| $198.00
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Limo ride to the store || $186.59
+
  | Limo ride to the store
|}
+
| $186.59
 
 
===Luxuries===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Price
+
  !rowspan="5"|Luxuries
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Opulence_Sundae Golden Opulence ice cream sundae] || $1,000
+
  | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Opulence_Sundae Golden Opulence ice cream sundae]
 +
| $1,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Waist deep half-room ball pit || $2,400
+
  | Waist deep half-room ball pit
 +
| $2,400
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | All 30 bestselling game consoles (refurb, eBay) || $2,640
+
  | All 30 bestselling game consoles (refurb, eBay)
 +
| $2,640
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Initial seat on Virgin Galactic suborbital flight || $200,000
+
  | Initial seat on Virgin Galactic suborbital flight
|}
+
| $200,000
 
 
===Video Games===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Price
+
  !rowspan="3"|Video Games
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Typing F-U-N-D-S || $10,000
+
  | Typing F-U-N-D-S
 +
| $10,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Daily sales of [http://www.minecraft.net/ Minecraft] || $193,500
+
  | Daily sales of [http://www.minecraft.net/ Minecraft]
 +
| $193,500
 
  |}
 
  |}
 
</div>
 
</div>
Line 549: Line 619:
 
==Millions==
 
==Millions==
 
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
 
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
 
+
{| class="wikitable"
===Dr. Evil===
+
! Category
{| class="wikitable sortable"
+
! Item
 +
! Price
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="3"|Dr. Evil
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  | Amount Dr. Evil thought he was demanding from the 1997 world
 +
| $6,630,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Amount Dr. Evil thought he was demanding from the 1997 world || $6,630,000
+
  | Amount he was actually demanding
 +
| $1,380,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Amount he was actually demanding || $1,380,000
+
  ! rowspan="2"|Video Games
 
  |-
 
  |-
  |}
+
  | Minecraft sales by October 2011
 
+
| $56,780,000
===William and Kates wedding===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  ! rowspan="4"|William and Kate's wedding
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Flowers || $800,000
+
  | Flowers
 +
| $800,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Security || $20,000,000
+
  | Security
 +
| $20,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Total cost || $800,000,000
+
  | Total cost
|}
+
| $80,000,000
===$50000 salary for 40 years after 25% taxes===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  ! rowspan="6"|Human Values
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 50,000 salary for 40 years after 25% taxes || $1,500,000
+
  | Amount needed to live comfortably off investments
 +
| $4,090,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Lifetime cost to avoid changing your oil by abandoning your car and buying a new one whenever you hit 5.000 miles || $3,270,000
+
  | EPA value of a human life
|}
+
| $8,120,000
===Rare Items===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  | Six Million Dollar Man (2011 dollars)
 +
| $29,870,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Qianlong Chinese vase sold in 2010 || $83,710,000
+
  | 50,000 salary for 40 years after 25% taxes
 +
| $1,500,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Leonardo’s Codex Leicester (bought by Bill Gates) || $45,930,000
+
  | Lifetime cost to avoid changing your oil by abandoning your car and buying a new one whenever you hit 5.000 miles
 +
| $3,270,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Estimated value of first-edition Gutenberg Bible || $34,610,000
+
  ! rowspan="4"|Corporation Expenses
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Double Eagle coin (All destroyed uncirculated save a few stolen from the US Mint) || $9,330,000
+
  | 30-second Super Bowl ad slot
 +
| $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Treskilling Yellow postage stamp (At $50 billion/lb possibly the world’s most expensive thing by weight) || $2,780,000
+
  | Annual cost to run Wikipedia
 +
| $18,500,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1297 Magna Carta original coypy signed by Edvard I || $21,890,000
+
  | Loss in NewsCorp value over hacking scandal
 +
| $750,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Painting from The Card Players series (rumor) || $250,000,000
+
  ! rowspan="6"|Vehicles
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Willem de Kooning’s “Woman III” (2006 auction) || $168,780,000
+
  | Most expensive production car (Bugatti Veyron)
 +
| $2,400,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Jackson Pollock’s “No. 5, 1948” (2006 auction) || $153,440,000
+
  | Most expensive car ever sold (1957 Ferrari 250)
 +
| $16,390,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Airbus A380 || $264,000,000
+
  | Marginal cost to launch one shuttle
 +
| $450,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mona Lisa assessed value || $730,660,000
+
  | Total shuttle program per launch
  |}
+
| $1,451,000,000  
 
+
  |-
===Prizes===
+
| One B-2 bomber
{| class="wikitable"
+
  | $2,500,000,000
  ! Amount !! Year !! Show/Movie !! Amount Today
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | $64,000
+
  ! rowspan="5"|Structures
| 1955
 
| The $64,000 Question
 
| $528,310
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | £1,000,000
+
  | Large city office building
| 1998
+
  | $100,000,000
| Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (UK)
 
  | $2,270,000
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | $1,000,000
+
| Dubai Fountain
  | 1999
+
  | $224,540,000
  | Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (USA)
+
  |-
  | $1,330,000
+
  | Burj Khalifa
 +
  | $1,521,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | $1,000,000
+
| New Yankee Stadium
| 1955
+
  | $1,545,000,000
| The Millionaire (TV Show)
 
| $8,250,000
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | $1,000,000
+
  ! rowspan="12"|Rare Items
| 1931
 
| The Millionaire (Movie)
 
| $14,530,000
 
|}
 
 
 
===Bitcoins===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Thing !! Price
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Market value of all Bitcoins as of 11/2011 || $22,819,797
+
  | Qianlong Chinese vase sold in 2010
 +
| $83,710,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Market value of all Bitcoins as at July 2011 peak price || $210,000,000
+
  | Leonardo’s Codex Leicester (bought by Bill Gates)
|}
+
| $45,930,000
===Elections===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Person !! Funds raised
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2012 presidential fundraising || $188,260,000
+
  | Estimated value of first-edition Gutenberg Bible
 +
| $34,610,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Herman Cain || $5,380,000
+
  | Double Eagle coin (All destroyed uncirculated save a few stolen from the US Mint)
 +
| $9,330,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Jon Huntsman || $4,510,000
+
  | Treskilling Yellow postage stamp (At $50 billion/lb possibly the world’s most expensive thing by weight)
 +
| $2,780,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Michele Bachmann || $9,870,000
+
  | 1297 Magna Carta original copy signed by Edward I
 +
| $21,890,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Ron Paul || $12,790,000
+
  | Painting from The Card Players series (rumor)
 +
| $250,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Rick Perry || $17,200,000
+
  | Willem de Kooning’s “Woman III” (2006 auction bought by David Geffen)
 +
| $168,780,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mitt Romney || $32,610,000
+
  | Jackson Pollock’s “No. 5, 1948” (2006 auction bought by David Geffen)
 +
| $153,440,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Barack Obama || $88,420,000
+
  | Airbus A380
 +
| $264,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other || $17,480,000
+
  | Mona Lisa assessed value
  |}
+
| $730,660,000
 
+
  |-
{| class="wikitable sortable"
+
! rowspan="3"|Bitcoins
  |-  
+
  |-
  ! Person !! Funds raised
+
  | Market value of all Bitcoins as of 11/2011
 +
| $22,819,797
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2008 presidential campaign fundraising ||$1,860,390,000
+
  | Market value of all Bitcoins as at July 2011 peak price
 +
| $210,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Excluding candidate Lee L. Mercer, Jr of Houston, who claimed, in his combined FEC filings, || $900,005,507 in fundraising and $900,006,431 in campaign spending.
+
  ! rowspan="9"|Millionaires
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Ron Paul || $32,480,000
+
  | Darell Issa (R-CA) net worth
 +
| $304,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | John Edwards || $64,410,000
+
  | Jane Harman (D-CA) net worth
 +
| $294,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Rudy Giuliani || $66,520,000
+
  | John Kerry (D-MA) net worth
 +
| $239,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mitt Romney || $116,730,000
+
  | Mitt Romney net worth
 +
| $210,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Barack Obama ||$799,670,000
+
  | Jon Huntsmann net worth
 +
| $40,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | John McCain || $394,280,000
+
  | Average net worth of US senator
 +
| $13,400,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Hilary Clinton || $259,050,000
+
  | Average net worth of US representative
|-
+
  | $4,900,000
  | Other || $127,250,00
 
|}
 
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Person !! Funds raised
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2004 presidential campaign fundraising || $1,006,810,000
+
  | A billionare
 +
| $1,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Howard Dean || $61,620,000
+
  ! rowspan="5"|Per US resident
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Wesley Clark || $34,610,000
+
  | $1 per US resident
 +
| $312,620,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | John Edwards || $39,310,000
+
  | $1 per US household
 +
| $117,290,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | John Kerry || $352,090,000
+
  | $10 from every US resident
 +
| $3,326,200,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | George W. Bush || $429,660,000
+
  | $10 from every US household
 +
| $1,179,180,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other || $89,520,000
+
  ! rowspan="3"|Raptors
  |}
+
|-
 
+
| One F-22 raptor
{| class="wikitable sortable"
+
| $154,500,000
  |-
+
  |-
! Person !! Funds raised
+
| One velociraptor (25% of Jurassic Park production budget amortized over three velociraptors)
 +
  | $1,930,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2000 presidential campaign fundraising || $805,120,000
+
  ! rowspan="8"|Professional rapper net worth
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Pat Buchanan || $37,440,000
+
  | 50 Cent
 +
| $100,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | John McCain || $75,180,000
+
  | 50 Cent (stage name)
 +
| $0.50
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Bill Bradley || $65,680,000
+
  | 50 Cent (adjusted for inflation)
 +
| $0.70
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Steve Forbes || $114,400,000 *The Money Chart incorrectly reads $11,440,000
+
  | Birdman
 +
| $100,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Al Gore || $170,520,000
+
  | Dr Dre
 +
| $125,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | George W. Bush || $247,100,000
+
  | Jay-Z
 +
| $450,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other || $94,800,000
+
  | Diddy
|}
+
| $475,000,000
 
 
===2010 midterm elections fundraising===
 
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Party !! Funds raised
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Democrats || $815,000,000
+
  ! rowspan="3"|J.K. Rowling
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Republicans || $587,000,000
+
  | J.K. Rowling
|}
+
| $1,000,000,000
 
 
===2011-2012 Campaign donations by industry===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Party !! Funds donated
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | To Other || $16,000,000 approximately
+
  | J. K. Rowling had she become a rapper (Professional assessment by rapper/geek culture expert MC Frontalot)
 +
| $82,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | To Democrats || $146,000,000 approximately
+
  ! rowspan="4"|Hurricanes
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | To Republicans || $145,000,000 approximately
+
  | Annual hurricane forecast R&D funding
  |}
+
| $20,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Hurricane forecast improvement funding since 1989
 +
| $440,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Economic savings--during Hurricane Irene alone--due to limiting evacuations made possible by recent forecast advances
 +
| $700,000,000
 +
  |}
  
{| class="wikitable sortable"
+
===Prizes===
  |-
+
{| class="wikitable"
! Party !! Funds donated
+
  ! Amount !! Year !! Show/Movie !! Amount Today
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Finance industry || $122,900,000
+
  | $64,000
 +
| 1955
 +
| The $64,000 Question
 +
| $528,310
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Organized labor || $18,720,000
+
  | £1,000,000
 +
| 1998
 +
| Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (UK)
 +
| $2,270,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Energy industry || $26,680,000
+
  | $1,000,000
 +
| 1999
 +
| Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (USA)
 +
| $1,330,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Lawyers and general lobbyists || $57,590,000
+
  | $1,000,000
 +
| 1955
 +
| The Millionaire (TV Show)
 +
| $8,250,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Health industry || $42,727,000
+
  | $1,000,000
  |-
+
  | 1931
  | Electronics and communication industry || $32,420,000
+
  | The Millionaire (Movie)
 +
| $14,530,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
===Inaugurations===
+
===Elections===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  ! Thing !! Price
+
  ! Person !! Funds raised
 +
|-
 +
| 2012 presidential fundraising || $188,260,000
 +
|-
 +
| Herman Cain || $5,380,000
 +
|-
 +
| Jon Huntsman || $4,510,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Barack Obama’s 2009 inauguration || $174,100,000
+
  | Michele Bachmann || $9,870,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Festivities (private donors) || $46,400,000
+
  | Ron Paul || $12,790,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Federal + state + local government (mainly security) || $127,700,000
+
  | Rick Perry || $17,200,000
|}
 
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Thing !! Price
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | George Bush’s 2005 inauguration || $178,600,000
+
  | Mitt Romney || $32,610,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Festivities (private donors) || $47,800,000
+
  | Barack Obama || $88,420,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Federal + state + local government (mainly security) || $130,800,000
+
  | Other || $17,480,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
===Past presidential campaign fundraising===
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  ! Campaign Year !! Funds raised
+
  ! Person !! Funds raised
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1996 || $559,810,000
+
  | 2008 presidential campaign fundraising ||$1,860,390,000
 +
|-
 +
| Excluding candidate Lee L. Mercer, Jr of Houston, who claimed, in his combined FEC filings, || $900,005,507 in fundraising and $900,006,431 in campaign spending.
 +
|-
 +
| Ron Paul || $32,480,000
 +
|-
 +
| John Edwards || $64,410,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1992 || $521,480,000
+
  | Rudy Giuliani || $66,520,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1988 || $606,300,000
+
  | Mitt Romney || $116,730,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1984 || $429,860,000
+
  | Barack Obama ||$799,670,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1980 || $434,220,000
+
  | John McCain || $394,280,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1976 || $664,160,000
+
  | Hilary Clinton || $259,050,000
 +
|-
 +
| Other || $127,250,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
===Millionaires===
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Person !! Funds raised
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Price
+
  | 2004 presidential campaign fundraising || $1,006,810,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Darell Issa (R-CA) net worth || $304,000,000
+
  | Howard Dean || $61,620,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Jane Harman (D-CA) net worth || $294,000,000
+
  | Wesley Clark || $34,620,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | John Kerry (D-MA) net worth || $239,000,000
+
  | John Edwards || $39,310,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mitt Romney net worth || $210,000,000
+
  | John Kerry || $352,090,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Jon Huntsmann net worth || $40,000,000
+
  | George W. Bush || $429,660,000
|-
 
| Average net worth of US senator || $13,400,000
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Average net worth of US representative || $4,900,000
+
  | Other || $89,510,000
|-
 
| A billionare || $1,000,000,000
 
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
===Value of a solid gold toilet (626 lbs) by year===
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Person !! Funds raised
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Year !! Value (Approximate)
+
  | 2000 presidential campaign fundraising || $805,120,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1967 || $2,000,000
+
  | Pat Buchanan || $37,440,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1968 || $2,000,000
+
  | John McCain || $75,180,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1969 || $2,000,000
+
  | Bill Bradley || $65,680,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1970 || $2,000,000
+
  | Steve Forbes || $114,400,000 *The Money Chart incorrectly reads $11,440,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1971 || $2,000,000
+
  | Al Gore || $170,520,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1972 || $3,000,000
+
  | George W. Bush || $247,100,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1973 || $4,000,000
+
  | Other || $94,800,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===2010 midterm elections fundraising===
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Party !! Funds raised
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1974 || $7,000,000
+
  | Democrats || $815,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1975 || $6,000,000
+
  | Republicans || $587,000,000
  |-
+
  |}
  | 1976 || $4,000,000
+
 
 +
===2011-2012 Campaign donations by industry===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
  |-
 +
! Industry !! To Democrats (approx) !! To Republicans (approx) !! To Other (approx) !! Total Funds donated
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1977 || $5,000,000
+
  | Finance industry || $47,000,000 || $68,000,000 || $7,000,000 || $122,900,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1978 || $6,000,000
+
  | Organized labor || $14,000,000 || $2,000,000 || $2,000,000 || $18,720,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1979 || $9,000,000
+
  | Energy industry || $6,000,000 || $21,000,000 || $0 || $26,680,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1980 || $15,000,000
+
  | Lawyers and general lobbyists || $39,000,000 || $19,000,000 || $0 || $57,590,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1981 || $10,000,000
+
  | Health industry || $19,000,000 || $23,000,000 || $0 || $42,727,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1982 || $8,000,000
+
  | Electronics and communication industry || $21,000,000 || $12,000,000 || $7,000,000 || $32,420,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Inaugurations===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Thing !! Price
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1983 || $9,000,000
+
  | Barack Obama’s 2009 inauguration || $174,100,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1984 || $7,000,000
+
  | Festivities (private donors) || $46,400,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1985 || $6,000,000
+
  | Federal + state + local government (mainly security) || $127,700,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Thing !! Price
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1986 || $7,000,000
+
  | George Bush’s 2005 inauguration || $178,600,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1987 || $8,000,000
+
  | Festivities (private donors) || $47,800,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1988 || $7,000,000
+
  | Federal + state + local government (mainly security) || $130,800,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Past presidential campaign fundraising===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Campaign Year !! Funds raised
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1989 || $6,000,000
+
  | 1996 || $559,810,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1990 || $6,000,000
+
  | 1992 || $521,480,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1991 || $5,000,000
+
  | 1988 || $606,300,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1992 || $5,000,000
+
  | 1984 || $429,860,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1993 || $5,000,000
+
  | 1980 || $434,220,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1994 || $5,000,000
+
  | 1976 || $664,160,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Value of a solid gold toilet (626 lbs) by year===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1995 || $5,000,000
+
  ! Year !! Value (Approximate)
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1996 || $5,000,000
+
  | 1967 || $2,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1997 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1968 || $2,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 1969 || $2,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1998 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1970 || $2,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1999 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1971 || $2,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2000 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1972 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2001 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1973 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2002 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1974 || $7,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2003 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1975 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2004 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1976 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2005 || $5,000,000
+
  | 1977 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2006 || $6,000,000
+
  | 1978 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2007 || $8,000,000
+
  | 1979 || $9,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2008 || $8,000,000
+
  | 1980 || $15,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2009 || $10,000,000
+
  | 1981 || $10,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2010 || $13,000,000
+
  | 1982 || $8,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2011 || $15,000,000
+
  | 1983 || $9,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Value of a carry-on suitcase full of $100 bills (30,00 ct, 60lbs)===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
! Year !! Value (Approximate)
+
| 1984 || $7,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1967 || $20,000,000
+
  | 1985 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1968 || $19,000,000
+
  | 1986 || $7,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1969 || $18,000,000
+
  | 1987 || $8,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1970 || $17,000,000
+
  | 1988 || $7,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1971 || $16,000,000
+
  | 1989 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1972 || $16,000,000
+
  | 1990 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1973 || $15,000,000
+
  | 1991 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1974 || $13,000,000
+
  | 1992 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1975 || $12,000,000
+
  | 1993 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1976 || $12,000,000
+
  | 1994 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1977 || $11,000,000
+
  | 1995 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1978 || $10,000,000
+
  | 1996 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1979 || $9,000,000
+
  | 1997 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1980 || $8,000,000
+
  | 1998 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1981 || $7,000,000
+
  | 1999 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1982 || $7,000,000
+
  | 2000 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1983 || $7,000,000
+
  | 2001 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1984 || $6,000,000
+
  | 2002 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1985 || $6,000,000
+
  | 2003 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1986 || $6,000,000
+
  | 2004 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1987 || $6,000,000
+
  | 2005 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1988 || $6,000,000
+
  | 2006 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1989 || $5,000,000
+
  | 2007 || $8,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1990 || $5,000,000
+
  | 2008 || $8,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1991 || $5,000,000
+
  | 2009 || $10,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1992 || $5,000,000
+
  | 2010 || $13,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1993 || $5,000,000
+
  | 2011 || $15,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Value of a carry-on suitcase full of $100 bills (30,00 ct, 60lbs)===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
| 1994 || $4,000,000
+
! Year !! Value (Approximate)
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1995 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1967 || $20,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1996 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1968 || $19,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1997 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1969 || $18,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1998 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1970 || $17,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1999 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1971 || $16,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2000 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1972 || $16,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2001 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1973 || $15,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2002 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1974 || $13,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2003 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1975 || $12,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2004 || $4,000,000
+
  | 1976 || $12,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2005 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1977 || $11,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2006 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1978 || $10,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2007 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1979 || $9,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2008 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1980 || $8,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2009 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1981 || $7,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2010 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1982 || $7,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2011 || $3,000,000
+
  | 1983 || $7,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Per US resident===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Value
+
  | 1984 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | $1 per US resident || $312,620,000
+
  | 1985 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | $1 per US household || $117,290,000
+
  | 1986 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | $10 from every US resident || $3,326,000,000
+
  | 1987 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | $10 from every US household || $1,179,180,000
+
  | 1988 || $6,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Amount needed to live comfortably off investments || $4,090,000
+
  | 1989 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | EPA value of a human life || $8,120,000
+
  | 1990 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Six Million Dollar Man (2011 dollars) || $29,870,000
+
  | 1991 || $5,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Raptors===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Price !! Notes
+
  | 1992 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | One F-22 raptor || $154,500,000 ||
+
  | 1993 || $5,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | One velociraptor || $1,9300,000 || (25% of Jurassic Park production budget amortized over three velociraptors)
+
  | 1994 || $4,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Professional rapper net worth===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Rapper !! Net worth
+
  | 1995 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 50 Cent || $100,000,000
+
  | 1996 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 50 Cent (stage name) || $0.50
+
  | 1997 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 50 Cent (adjusted for inflation) || $0.70
+
  | 1998 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Birdman || $100,000,000
+
  | 1999 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Dr Dre || $125,000,000
+
  | 2000 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Jay-Z || $450,000,000
+
  | 2001 || $4,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2002 || $4,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Diddy || $475,000,000
+
  | 2003 || $4,000,000
  |}
+
  |-
 
+
| 2004 || $4,000,000
===J.K. Rowling===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Value !! Notes
+
  | 2005 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | J.K. Rowlinng || $1,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 2006 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | J. K. Rowling had she become a rapper || $82,000 || Professional assessment by rapper/geek culture expert MC Frontalot
+
  | 2007 || $3,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Annual hurricane forecast R&D funding===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Price
+
  | 2008 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Annual hurricane forecast R&D funding || $20,000,000
+
  | 2009 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Hurricane forecast improvement funding since 1989 || $440,000,000
+
  | 2010 || $3,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Economic savings--during Hurricane Irene alone--due to limiting evacuations made possible by recent forecast advances || $700,000,000
+
  | 2011 || $3,000,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
===Corporation Expenses===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Item !! Price
 
|-
 
| 30-second Super Bowl ad slot || $3,000,000
 
|-
 
| Annual cost to run Wikipedia || $18,500,000
 
|-
 
| Loss in NewsCorp value over hacking scandal || $750,000,000
 
|}
 
 
===Vehicles===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Item !! Price
 
|-
 
|Most expensive production car (Bugatti Veyron) || $2,400,000
 
|-
 
| Most expensive car ever sold (1957 Ferrari 250) || $16,390,000
 
|-
 
| Marginal cost to launch one shuttle || $450,000,000
 
|-
 
| Total shuttle program per launch || $450,000,000
 
|-
 
| One B-2 bomber || $2,500,000,000
 
|}
 
 
===Structures===
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Item !! Price
 
|-
 
| Large city office building || $100,000,000
 
|-
 
| Dubai Fountain || $224,540,000
 
|-
 
| Burj Khalifa || $1,5210,000,000
 
|-
 
| New Yankee Stadium || $1,545,000,000
 
|}
 
===Video Games===
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
|-
 
! Item !! Price
 
|-
 
| Minecraft sales by October 2011 || $56,780,000
 
|}
 
  
 
</div>
 
</div>
Line 1,270: Line 1,338:
 
  | Gates Foundation total giving since 1994 || $25,360,000,000
 
  | Gates Foundation total giving since 1994 || $25,360,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Global health || ~12B
+
  | Global health || ~$12,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | US || ~4B
+
  | US || ~$4,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Developments || ~3B
+
  | Developments || ~$3,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Grants || ~1B
+
  | Grants || ~$1,000,000,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
Line 1,312: Line 1,380:
 
  {| class= "wikitable sortable"
 
  {| class= "wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
! Item !! Value !! Notes
+
! Item !! Value
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Student loans outstanding || $955,800,000,000 ||
+
  | Student loans outstanding || $955,800,000,000
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | Federal student loans || $792,900,000,000 ||
+
  | Federal student loans || $792,900,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Defaulted Federal student loans || $65,020,000,000 || Private total unknown
+
  | Defaulted Federal student loans (Private total unknown) || $65,020,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Private student loans || $163,900,000,000 ||
+
  | Private student loans || $163,900,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Total spending on primary and secondary education in the US || $612,470,000,000 ||
+
  | Total spending on primary and secondary education in the US || $612,470,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Teacher Salaries || $295,810,000,000 ||
+
  | Teacher Salaries || $295,810,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Total annual higher education spending in the US || $355,110,000,000 ||
+
  | Total annual higher education spending in the US || $355,110,000,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
Line 1,443: Line 1,511:
  
 
===US health care spending===
 
===US health care spending===
 
+
{| class="wikitable"
===Total annual tax breaks to the five largest oil companies===
+
! Category
 
+
! Item
===US GDP===
+
! Price
Combined economic value of all goods and services produced in a year
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Value
+
  ! rowspan="5"|US cancer spending
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | US GDP || $14,545,950,000,000
+
  | US spending on lung cancer treatment
 +
| $11,310,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Government || $1,980,640,000,000
+
  | US spending on tobacco marketing
 +
| $13,600,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Real estate || $1,925,210,000,000
+
  | US spending on all cancer treatment
 +
| $106,870,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Non-rental Real estate || $1,737,500,000,000
+
  | US spending on cigarettes
 +
| $91,660,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Rental and leasing || $187,610,000,000
+
  ! rowspan="10"|US health care spending (2005 data)
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Nondurable goods || $739,300,000,000
+
  | Private insurance
 +
| $785,900,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Food, beverage, and tobacco || $212,330,000,000
+
  | Out-of-pocket
 +
| $282,260,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Chemicals || $223,050,000,000
+
  | Other private spending
 +
| $79,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Petroleum and coal || $123,630,000,000
+
  | Total private spending
 +
| $1,147,050,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Apparel || $12,050,000,000
+
  | Medicare
 +
| $387,070,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Paper products || $57,800,000,000
+
  | Medicaid
 +
| $351,980,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Plastics and rubber products || $58,410,000,000
+
  | Other government spending
 +
| $219,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Textile mills || $18,130,000,000
+
  | Total Government spending
 +
| $958,950,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Printing and related supports || $33,790,000,000
+
  | Total
 +
| $2,106,000,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Total annual tax breaks to the five largest oil companies===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Durable goods || $898,420,000,000
+
  ! Item !! Value
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Computers and electronics|| $212,640,000,000
+
  | Combined pay at Wall St. banks and securities firms || $135,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Metal products || $125,590,000,000
+
  | Mobile computing annual sales || $220,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Machinery || $116,110,000,000
+
  | Online spending in 2009 || $251,070,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Wood products || $21,530,000,000
+
  | NCAA budget || $5,640,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Furniture || $24,930,000,000
+
  | Total annual tax breaks to the five largest oil companies || $2,100,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Motor vehicles, trailers, and parts || $80,560,000,000
+
  | US annual oil and gas subsidies || $41,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other transportation equipment || $93,440,000,000
+
  | Ethanol subsidies || $5,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mineral products || $39,360,000,000
+
  | Combined annual profits of the ten largest health insurance companies || $12,870,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Metals || $44,710,000,000
+
  | 2010 lobbying || $3,560,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Electrical equipment and components|| $53,260,000,000
+
  | 2005 lobbying || $2,750,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Miscellaneous || $81,390,000,000
+
  | 2000 lobbying || $2,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Finance and insurance || $1,207,030,000,000
+
  | One B-2 bomber || $2,500,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===US R&D===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Federal Reserve banks and credit intermediaries || $529,540,000,000
+
  ! Item !! Value
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Insurance || $437,340,000,000
+
  | US annual corporate R&D || $334,490,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Investments || $180,500,000,000
+
  | Information technology || $46,560,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Funds and trusts || $59,550,000,000
+
  | Scientific technical, or professional services || $31,060,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Professional and business services || $1,752,750,000,000
+
  | Manufacturing industries (Unlabelled on the money chart) || $236,151,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Waste management || $39,870,000,000
+
  | Other || $20,710,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===US GDP===
 +
Combined economic value of all goods and services produced in a year
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Administrative and support services || $358,110,000,000
+
  ! Item !! Value
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Legal services || $225,830,000,000
+
  | US GDP || $14,545,950,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Computer systems design and service || $174,730,000,000
+
  | Government || $1,980,640,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Corporate management || $253,950,000,000
+
  | Real estate || $1,925,210,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other professional or technical services || $700,250,000,000
+
  | Non-rental Real estate || $1,737,500,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Health and education || $1,294,580,000,000
+
  | Rental and leasing || $187,610,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Social assistance || $93,750,000,000
+
  | Nondurable goods || $739,300,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Ambulatory health care services || $529,750,000,000
+
  | Food, beverage, and tobacco || $212,330,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Hospitals || $466,390,000,000
+
  | Chemicals || $223,050,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Educational services || $159,580,000,000
+
  | Petroleum and coal || $123,630,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Utilities || $276,210,000,000
+
  | Apparel || $12,050,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other services || $345,540,000,000
+
  | Paper products || $57,800,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Construction || $553,750,000,000
+
  | Plastics and rubber products || $58,410,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Retail trade || $844,380,000,000
+
  | Textile mills || $18,130,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Wholesale trade || $804,410,000,000
+
  | Printing and related supports || $33,790,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mining || $248,080,000,000
+
  | Durable goods || $898,420,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mining (other than oil and gas) || $50,380,000,000
+
  | Computers and electronics|| $212,640,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mining support || $51,270,000,000
+
  | Metal products || $125,590,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Oil and gas || $145,990,000,000
+
  | Machinery || $116,110,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Agriculture || $137,120,000,000
+
  | Wood products || $21,530,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Farms || $107,140,000,000
+
  | Furniture || $24,930,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Forestry, fishing, and related || $30,080,000,000
+
  | Motor vehicles, trailers, and parts || $80,560,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Arts and entertainment || $528,620,000,000
+
  | Other transportation equipment || $93,440,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Food service || $285,480,000,000
+
  | Mineral products || $39,360,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Performing arts, sports, and museums || $73,040,000,000
+
  | Metals || $44,710,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Amusements, gambling, and general recreation || $73,040,000,000 || This appears to be a mistake Randall made and should read $58,110,000,000
+
  | Electrical equipment and components|| $53,260,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Accommodation || $111,990,000,000
+
  | Miscellaneous || $81,390,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Information || $658,630,000,000
+
  | Finance and insurance || $1,207,030,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Broadcasting and telecommunications|| $366,560,000,000
+
  | Federal Reserve banks and credit intermediaries || $529,540,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Information and data processing || $78,300,000,000
+
  | Insurance || $437,340,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Film, video, and sound recording || $61,610,000,000
+
  | Investments || $180,500,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Publishing (including software) || $152,170,000,000
+
  | Funds and trusts || $59,550,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Transportation and storage || $401,280,000,000
+
  | Professional and business services || $1,752,750,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Warehousing and storage || $40,590,000,000
+
  | Waste management || $39,870,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Water || $14,730,000,000
+
  | Administrative and support services || $358,110,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Air || $36,770,000,000 || This appears to be a mistake Randall and should read $63,680,000,000
+
  | Legal services || $225,830,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Rail || $31,730,000,000
+
  | Computer systems design and service || $174,730,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Truck || $116,520,000,000
+
  | Corporate management || $253,950,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Transit and land passenger || $24,110,000,000
+
  | Other professional or technical services || $700,250,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Pipeline || $12,360,000,000
+
  | Health and education || $1,294,580,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other transport) || $97,560,000,000
+
  | Social assistance || $93,750,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  |}
+
  | Ambulatory health care services || $529,750,000,000
 
 
===Billionaires===
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
! Category
 
! Person
 
! Networth
 
! Ten Richest Ranking
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! rowspan="14"|Technology
+
  | Hospitals || $466,390,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Carlos Slim Helú and family
+
  | Educational services || $159,580,000,000
| $74,000,000,000
+
  |-
  | First
+
| Utilities || $276,210,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Bill Gates
+
  | Other services || $345,540,000,000
| $56,000,000,000
 
| Second
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Larry Ellison
+
  | Construction || $553,750,000,000
| $39,500,000,000
 
| Fifth
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Larry Page
+
  | Retail trade || $844,380,000,000
| $19,800,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Sergey Brin
+
  | Wholesale trade || $804,410,000,000
| $19,800,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Jeff Bezos
+
  | Mining || $248,080,000,000
| $18,000,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Steve Ballmer
+
  | Mining (other than oil and gas) || $50,380,000,000
| $14,500,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mark Zuckerberg
+
  | Mining support || $51,270,000,000
| $13,500,000,000
+
  |-
  |
+
| Oil and gas || $145,990,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Paul Allen
+
  | Agriculture || $137,120,000,000
| $13,500,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Steve Jobs (D)
+
  | Farms || $107,140,000,000
| $8,300,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Eric Schmidt
+
  | Forestry, fishing, and related || $30,080,000,000
| $7,000,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Sean Parker
+
  | Arts and entertainment || $528,620,000,000
| $1,600,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Steve Case
+
  | Food service || $285,480,000,000
| $1,300,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! rowspan="9"|Politicians and alleged evil plutocratic puppet masters
+
  | Performing arts, sports, and museums || $73,040,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Warren Buffett
+
  | Amusements, gambling, and general recreation || $73,040,000,000 || This appears to be a mistake by [[Randall]] and should read $58,110,000,000
| $50,000,000,000
 
| Third
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Charles Koch
+
  | Accommodation || $111,990,000,000
| $22,000,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | David Koch
+
  | Information || $658,630,000,000
| $22,000,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Michael Bloomberg
+
  | Broadcasting and telecommunications|| $366,560,000,000
| $18,100,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | George Soros
+
  | Information and data processing || $78,300,000,000
| $14,000,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Silvio Berlusconi and family
+
  | Film, video, and sound recording || $61,610,000,000
| $7,800,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Rupert Murdoch
+
  | Publishing (including software) || $152,170,000,000
| $7,600,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | David Geffen
+
  | Transportation and storage || $401,280,000,000
| $6,000,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! rowspan="6"|Uncategorized
+
  | Warehousing and storage || $40,590,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Bernard Arnault
+
  | Water || $14,730,000,000
| $41,000,000,000
 
| Fourth
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Lakshmi Mittal
+
  | Air || $36,770,000,000 || This appears to be a mistake by [[Randall]] and should read $63,680,000,000
| $31,100,000,000
 
| Sixth
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Amancio Ortega
+
  | Rail || $31,730,000,000
| $31,000,000,000
 
| Seventh
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Eike Batista
+
  | Truck || $116,520,000,000
| $30,000,000,000
 
| Eighth
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mukesh Ambani
+
  | Transit and land passenger || $24,110,000,000
| $27,000,000,000
 
| Ninth
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! rowspan="5"|Walmart
+
  | Pipeline || $12,360,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Christy Walton and family
+
  | Other transport) || $97,560,000,000
| $26,500,000,000
 
| Tenth
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Jim Walton
+
  |}
  | $21,300,000,000
+
 
  |
+
===Billionaires===
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
! Category
 +
  ! Person
 +
! Networth
 +
  ! Ten Richest Ranking
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Alice Walton
+
  ! rowspan="14"|Technology
| $21,200,000,000
 
|
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | S. Robson Walton
+
  | Carlos Slim Helú and family
  | $21,000,000,000
+
  | $74,000,000,000
  |
+
  | First
 
  |-
 
  |-
 +
| Bill Gates
 +
| $56,000,000,000
 +
| Second
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! rowspan="5"|Fictional (source: ''Forbes'')
+
  | Larry Ellison
 +
| $39,500,000,000
 +
| Fifth
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Carlisle Cullen
+
  | Larry Page
  | $34,500,000,000
+
  | $19,800,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Scrooge McDuck
+
  | Sergey Brin
  | $33,500,000,000
+
  | $19,800,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Bruce Wayne
+
  | Jeff Bezos
  | $6,500,000,000
+
  | $18,000,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Artemis Fowl
+
  | Steve Ballmer
  | $1,900,000,000
+
  | $14,500,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
! rowspan="4"|Fashion
+
| Mark Zuckerberg
 +
| $13,500,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Lilianne Bettencourt
+
  | Paul Allen
  | $23,500,000,000
+
  | $13,500,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Ralph Lauren
+
  | Steve Jobs (D)
  | $5,800,000,000
+
  | $8,300,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Ronald Lauder
+
  | Eric Schmidt
  | $3,100,000,000
+
  | $7,000,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
! rowspan="5"|Art and media
+
| Sean Parker
 +
| $1,600,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | George Lucas
+
  | Steve Case
  | $3,200,000,000
+
  | $1,300,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Oprah Winfrey
+
  ! rowspan="9"|Politicians and alleged evil plutocratic puppet masters
  | $3,200,000,000
+
|-
 +
| Warren Buffett
 +
| $50,000,000,000
 +
| Third
 +
|-
 +
| Charles Koch
 +
  | $22,000,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Five wealthiest rappers combined
+
  | David Koch
  | $1,250,000,000
+
  | $22,000,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | J. K. Rowling
+
  | Michael Bloomberg
  | $1,000,000,000
+
  | $18,100,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! rowspan="2"|Donald Trump
+
  | George Soros
 +
| $14,000,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Donald Trump
+
  | Silvio Berlusconi and family
  | $2,700,000,000
+
  | $7,800,000,000
 
  |
 
  |
 
  |-
 
  |-
|}
+
| Rupert Murdoch
 
+
| $7,600,000,000
===Corporations===
+
|
by market capitalization (combined value of all stock)
 
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Company !! Value
+
  | David Geffen
 +
| $6,000,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Saudi Aramco (State-owned company--estimated market value) || $2,940,000,000,000
+
  ! rowspan="6"|Uncategorized
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Apple || $358,310,000,000
+
  | Bernard Arnault
 +
| $41,000,000,000
 +
| Fourth
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | ExxonMobil || $357,910,000,000
+
  | Lakshmi Mittal
 +
| $31,100,000,000
 +
| Sixth
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | PetroChina || $280,160,000,000
+
  | Amancio Ortega
 +
| $31,000,000,000
 +
| Seventh
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | IBM || $211,640,000,000
+
  | Eike Batista
 +
| $30,000,000,000
 +
| Eighth
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Microsoft || $211,340,000,000
+
  | Mukesh Ambani
 +
| $27,000,000,000
 +
| Ninth
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Bank of China || $208,810,000,000
+
  ! rowspan="5"|Walmart
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | China Mobile || $201,510,000,000
+
  | Christy Walton and family
 +
| $26,500,000,000
 +
| Tenth
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Royal Dutch Shell || $199,780,000,000
+
  | Jim Walton
 +
| $21,300,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Nestle || $193,700,000,000
+
  | Alice Walton
 +
| $21,200,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Chevron || $188,030,000,000
+
  | S. Robson Walton
 +
| $21,000,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
| Facebook 2011 valuation || $70,000,000,000
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | AT&T attempted T-Mobile purchase || $39,000,000,000
+
  ! rowspan="5"|Fictional (source: ''Forbes'')
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Facebook 2010 valuation || $33,450,000,000
+
  | Carlisle Cullen
  |-  
+
| $34,500,000,000
  | Zynga 2011 valuation || $14,000,000,000
+
|
 +
  |-
 +
  | Scrooge McDuck
 +
| $33,500,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | LivingSocial 2011 valuation || $2,980,000,000
+
  | Bruce Wayne
  |}
+
| $6,500,000,000
 
+
  |
===US household income===
 
 
 
===Cost to buy the world a coke===
 
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Cost
+
  | Artemis Fowl
 +
| $1,900,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
| Cost to buy the world a coke (2011 wholesale prices) || $2,240,000,000
+
! rowspan="4"|Fashion
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Coca-Cola's annual marketing budget || $2,980,000,000
+
  | Lilianne Bettencourt
 +
| $23,500,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Cost to teach the world to sing (four half-hour lessons at $30 each) || $840,000,000,000
+
  | Ralph Lauren
  |}
+
| $5,800,000,000
 
+
  |
===State government spending===
 
 
 
[map without amounts]
 
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Total US states' debt || $46,000,000,000
+
  | Ronald Lauder
  |}
+
| $3,100,000,000
 
+
  |
====US foreign military aid====
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
! Area !! Amount
+
! rowspan="5"|Art and media
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Total || $11,010,000,000
+
  | George Lucas
 +
| $3,200,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Afghanistan || $5,800,000,000
+
  | Oprah Winfrey
 +
| $3,200,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Israel || $2,410,000,000
+
  | Five wealthiest rappers combined
 +
| $1,250,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Egypt || $1,320,000,000
+
  | J. K. Rowling
 +
| $1,000,000,000
 +
|
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="2"|Donald Trump
 +
|-
 +
| Donald Trump
 +
| $2,700,000,000
 +
|
 
  |-
 
  |-
| Other || $5,800,000,000
+
|}
|}
+
 
 +
Combined net worth of the world's 1,210 billionaires $4,500,000,000,000
 +
 
 +
===Corporations===
 +
by market capitalization (combined value of all stock)
  
====US foreign humanitarian and economic aid====
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Area !! Amount
+
  ! Company !! Value
 +
|-
 +
| Saudi Aramco (State-owned company--estimated market value) || $2,940,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Total || $11,010,000,000
+
  | Apple || $358,310,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Iraq and Afghanistan || $5,370,000,000
+
  | ExxonMobil || $357,910,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | West Bank and Ghana || $1,050,000,000
+
  | PetroChina || $280,160,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Africa (total) || $8,850,000,000
+
  | IBM || $211,640,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other || $19,130,000,000
+
  | Microsoft || $211,340,000,000
  |}
+
  |-
 
+
| Bank of China || $208,810,000,000
===Ft. Knox gold reserves===
+
|-
{| class="wikitable sortable"
+
| China Mobile || $201,510,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Royal Dutch Shell || $199,780,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Nestle || $193,700,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Chevron || $188,030,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Value
+
  | Facebook 2011 valuation || $70,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Ft. Knox gold reserves (November 2011 prices) || $245,900,000,000
+
  | AT&T attempted T-Mobile purchase || $39,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Unclaimed US treasury bonds || $16,000,000,000
+
  | Facebook 2010 valuation || $33,450,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Zynga 2011 valuation || $14,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | All the tea in China || $4,210,000,000
+
  | LivingSocial 2011 valuation || $2,980,000,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
===Corporate tax deduction===
 
  
(Note: some of the corporate deductions are very technical, and even with the help of a technical accountant, I had trouble making sense of them. The text below is my best attempt at an English interpretation of the legalese.)
+
===Cost to buy the world a coke===
  
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Area !! Deductions
+
  ! Item !! Cost
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Corporate tax deduction || $125,180,000,000
+
  | Cost to buy the world a coke (2011 wholesale prices) || $2,240,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Reduced tax on first $10 million of corporate income || $3,240,000,000
+
  | Coca-Cola's annual marketing budget || $2,980,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Delay of taxes on 'income' made from defaulting on a debt (Temporary stimulus measure) || $21,390,000,000
+
  | Cost to teach the world to sing (four half-hour lessons at $30 each) || $840,000,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===US household income===
 +
 
 +
===State government spending===
 +
 
 +
[map without amounts]
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Temporary change to equipment depreciation rules allowing more (and sooner) deductions on the purchase of new equipment || $24,390,000,000
+
  | Total US states' debt || $46,000,000,000
|-
 
| Clean energy, space, science, and tech R&D || $13,900,000,000
 
|-
 
| Miscellaneous rules for international corporate finance || $6,800,000,000
 
|-
 
| Foreign corporation income financing rules || $13,680,000,000
 
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
===Individual tax deductions===
+
====US foreign military aid====
These are types of income, or uses of income, which the government has partly or fully exempt from tax, often to encourage some activity.  This can be thought of as "spent" tax revenue, although it's not quite that simple; there's no guarantee that removing the deduction would add that amount of revenue, because the presence of the deduction may be affecting taxpayers' spending habits.
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Area !! Deductions
+
  ! Area !! Amount
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Small business health insurance|| $1,620,000,000
+
  | Total || $11,010,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Federal employee expenses abroad || $7,910,000,000
+
  | Afghanistan || $5,800,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | EITC (anti-poverty low-income tax credit) || $78,760,000,000
+
  | Israel || $2,410,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Donations to charity || $39,130,000,000
+
  | Egypt || $1,320,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Capital gains (investment income) || $78,760,000,000
+
  | Other || $5,800,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
====US foreign humanitarian and economic aid====
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Pension contributions || $84,940,000,000
+
  ! Area !! Amount
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Other || $64,970,000,000
+
  | Total || $11,010,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Employee fringe benefits || $6,690,000,000
+
  | Iraq and Afghanistan || $5,370,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Scholarships || $2,130,000,000
+
  | West Bank and Ghana || $1,050,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Property taxes || $15,710,000,000
+
  | Africa (total) || $8,850,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Employer-provided transportation || $3,850,000,000
+
  | Other || $19,130,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Ft. Knox gold reserves===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Retirement accounts || $24,630,000,000
+
  ! Item !! Value
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Cafeteria plans || $26,760,000,000
+
  | Ft. Knox gold reserves (November 2011 prices) || $245,900,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | State and local bonds || $19,560,000,000
+
  | Unclaimed US treasury bonds || $16,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Company daycare || $3,140,000,000
+
  | All the tea in China || $4,210,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Corporate tax deduction===
 +
 
 +
(Note: some of the corporate deductions are very technical, and even with the help of a technical accountant, I had trouble making sense of them. The text below is my best attempt at an English interpretation of the legalese.)
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | College and university tax credits || $12,060,000,000
+
  ! Area !! Deductions
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mortgage interest || $92,040,000,000
+
  | Corporate tax deduction || $125,180,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Medicare Benefits || $55,850,000,000
+
  | Reduced tax on first $10 million of corporate income || $3,240,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Child care || $55,850,000,000
+
  | Delay of taxes on 'income' made from defaulting on a debt (Temporary stimulus measure) || $21,390,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Employer health plans || $107,140,000,000
+
  | Temporary change to equipment depreciation rules allowing more (and sooner) deductions on the purchase of new equipment || $24,390,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Making Work Pay (ending) || $60,510,000,000
+
  | Clean energy, space, science, and tech R&D || $13,900,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | First-time homebuyer credit || $8,820,000,000
+
  | Miscellaneous rules for international corporate finance || $6,800,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Veterans' benefits || $5,570,000,000
+
  | Foreign corporation income financing rules || $13,680,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Individual tax deductions===
 +
These are types of income, or uses of income, which the government has partly or fully exempt from tax, often to encourage some activity.  This can be thought of as "spent" tax revenue, although it's not quite that simple; there's no guarantee that removing the deduction would add that amount of revenue, because the presence of the deduction may be affecting taxpayers' spending habits.
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Life insurance benefits || $25,750,000,000
+
  ! Area !! Deductions
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Capital gains death exclusion || $25,750,000,000
+
  | Small business health insurance|| $1,620,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Social security and railroad retirement || $27,170,000,000
+
  | Federal employee expenses abroad || $7,910,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Home sale capital gains || $15,200,000,000
+
  | EITC (anti-poverty low-income tax credit) || $78,760,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Federal spending===
 
 
 
===Disasters===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Disaster !! Estimated Total Damage !! Notes
+
  | Donations to charity || $39,130,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Japan 2011 Earthquake || $235,000,000,000 || reconstruction and recovery cost, World Bank estimate
+
  | Capital gains (investment income) || $78,760,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Hurricane Katrina || $107,440,000,000 ||
+
  | Pension contributions || $84,940,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1988 US Drought || $78,060,000,000 ||
+
  | Other || $64,970,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1980 US Drought || $60,740,000,000 ||
+
  | Employee fringe benefits || $6,690,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Hurricane Andrew || $46,180,000,000 ||
+
  | Scholarships || $2,130,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 9/11 insured losses || $40,000,000,000 || For hurricanes, the rule of thumb is that total losses are roughly double insured losses.  It is unclear if a similar rule exist for terrorism.
+
  | Property taxes || $15,710,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Hurricane Ike || $28,170,000,000 ||
+
  | Employer-provided transportation || $3,850,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Hurricane Irene || $8,000,000,000 || (estimated)
+
  | Retirement accounts || $24,630,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Hypothetical disasters===
 
Estimated total losses if the disaster happened today
 
(based on insurance industry modeling)
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Disaster !! Estimated Total Losses !! Notes
+
  | Cafeteria plans || $26,760,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1938 Long Island Express || $236,960,000,000 || if it had curved left and made landfall in New Jersey instead of Long Island
+
  | State and local bonds || $19,560,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1812 New Madrid, Missouri earthquake || $206,050,000,000 ||
+
  | Company daycare || $3,140,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1926 Miami hurricane || $202,000,000,000 ||
+
  | College and university tax credits || $12,060,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1909 San Francisco earthquake || $197,810,000,000 ||
+
  | Mortgage interest || $92,040,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1907 Galveston hurricane || $82,420,000,000 ||
+
  | Medicare Benefits || $55,850,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Long Island Express || $78,060,000,000 || (1938 New England Hurricane)
+
  | Child care || $55,850,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Charleston SC, quake of 1886 || $76,240,000,000 ||
+
  | Employer health plans || $107,140,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake || $12,360,000,000 ||
+
  | Making Work Pay (ending) || $60,510,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| First-time homebuyer credit || $8,820,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Veterans' benefits || $5,570,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Life insurance benefits || $25,750,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Capital gains death exclusion || $25,750,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Social security and railroad retirement || $27,170,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Home sale capital gains || $15,200,000,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
  
===Cost of electricity===
+
===Federal spending===
 
 
===BP oil spill claims fund===
 
 
 
===New York CIty===
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Area !! Combined Property Value
+
  ! Item !! Value
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | New York City || $806,490,000,000
+
  | Annual Deficit || $1,394,530,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Manhattan || $281,040,000,000
+
  | Additional receipts || $83,230,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Queens || $208,180,000,000
+
  | Taxes raised || $2,192,180,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Disasters===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Brooklyn || $201,230,000,000
+
  ! Disaster !! Estimated Total Damage !! Notes
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Staten Island || $61,230,000,000
+
  | Japan 2011 Earthquake || $235,000,000,000 || reconstruction and recovery cost, World Bank estimate
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Bronx || $54,660,000,000
+
  | Hurricane Katrina || $107,440,000,000 ||
|}
 
 
 
===Megaprojects===
 
 
 
===Federal budget===
 
 
 
===Budget options===
 
 
 
===Stimulus spending===
 
 
 
===Bailouts===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Value !! Notes
+
  | 1988 US Drought || $78,060,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1980s-1990 S&L bailout || $78,300,000,000 || total cost to taxpayers
+
  | 1980 US Drought || $60,740,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Cost to FDIC of bank failures || $19,000,000,000 || resulting from the 2008 financial crisis
+
  | Hurricane Andrew || $46,180,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | TARP bailout funds distributed || $392,980,000,000 || Out of $700,000,000,000 available
+
  | 9/11 insured losses || $40,000,000,000 || For hurricanes, the rule of thumb is that total losses are roughly double insured losses.  It is unclear if a similar rule exist for terrorism.
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Estimated TARP taxpayer losses || $41,660,000,000 ||
+
  | Hurricane Ike || $28,170,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Value of outstanding TARP assets || $144,440,000 || Randall made a mistake here the chart should read $144,440,000,000
+
  | Hurricane Irene || $8,000,000,000 || (estimated)
|-
+
  |}
| Bailout funds returned || $206,880,000,000 ||
+
 
|-
+
===Hypothetical disasters===
| Current Eurozone bailout fund || $1,361,700,000,000 ||
+
Estimated total losses if the disaster happened today
  |}
+
(based on insurance industry modeling)
 
 
===US Spending on Wars===
 
Including only direct spending on war operations, and not resulting veterans' benefits or interest on debt incurred.
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! War !! Cost
+
  ! Disaster !! Estimated Total Losses !! Notes
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | World War I || $334,000,000,000
+
  | 1938 Long Island Express || $236,960,000,000 || if it had curved left and made landfall in New Jersey instead of Long Island
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Spanish-American War || $9,030,000,000
+
  | 1812 New Madrid, Missouri earthquake || $206,050,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Civil War || $79,740,000,000
+
  | 1926 Miami hurricane || $202,000,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | American revolution || $2,410,000,000
+
  | 1909 San Francisco earthquake || $197,810,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1812 || $1,550,000,000
+
  | 1907 Galveston hurricane || $82,420,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mexican War || $2,380,000,000
+
  | Long Island Express || $78,060,000,000 || (1938 New England Hurricane)
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | World War II || $4,104,000,000,000
+
  | Charleston SC, quake of 1886 || $76,240,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Korean War || $341,000,000,000
+
  | 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake || $12,360,000,000 ||
  |-
+
|}
  | Vietnam War || $738,000,000,000
+
 
 +
===Cost of electricity===
 +
(Price of electricity to power all US homes for a year, by plant type)
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
!Plant Type !! Cost !! Notes
 +
|-
 +
|Advance combined cycle natural gas || 78,100,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
|Conventional Coal (without societal costs) || 117,340,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| External societal costs from use of that amount of coal power || $226,690,000,000 || Harvard Medical School analysis. Range of possible values was $119b to $342b. Most of the uncertainty was due to potentially lower costs from air pollution or higher ones from climate change.
 +
|-
 +
| Public Health Burden in Appalacia [sic] || $55,400,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Air pollution from power plants || $118,300,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Climate Impact || $40,030,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Advanced coal with carbon capture || $168,590,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Biomass || $139,250,000,000 || Estimates of climate impact vary wildly Consensus seems to be more than nothing but less than coal.
 +
|-
 +
| Geothermal || $125,880,000,000 ||
 +
  |-
 +
  | Hydroelectric || $106,940,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Wind || $120,070,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Offshore wind || $301,030,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Solar (photovoltaic) || $260,800,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Solar (thermal) || $385,940,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Advanced nuclear || $140,980,000,000 || Little impact on climate/air, but hard to find assessments of meltdown and fuel storage costs/risks. Some past costs shown for perspective.
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Nuclear accidents===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
!Accident !! Cost !! Notes
 +
|-
 +
| Fukushima meltdown estimated total cost to Japan || $131,100,000,000 || Compare to $128,590,000,000 for deaths from quake/tsunami
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Persian Gulf War || $102,000,000,000
+
  | Fukushima cost from 300 extra cancer deaths (EPA conversion) || $2,579,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Iraq War || $784,000,000,000
+
  | Belarus estimated 30-year costs from Chernobyl || $282,350,000,000 ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | War in Afghanistan || $321,000,000,000
+
| Cost of estimated 42,457 Chernobyl deaths (EPA method) || $344,750,000,000 ||
  |}
+
|}
 
+
 
</div>
+
===BP oil spill claims fund===
 
+
{| class="wikitable sortable"
==Trillions==
+
|-
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
+
! Item !! Value
 
+
|-
===Size of derivatives markets by year===
+
| BP oil spill claims fund || $20,270,000,000
{| class="wikitable sortable"
+
|-
  |-
+
| Total 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami aid from all countries || $15,840,000,000
  ! Year !! Size of market
+
|-
  |-
+
| Worldwide aid to Somalia since 1991 || $55,000,000,000
  | 1988 || $3,090,000,000,000
+
|-
 +
| G8/IMF loan pledge to Arab Spring || $73,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Japan's contribution to TEPCO victim fund || $62,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Cost to fund wikipedia at current levels for 100 years || $1,850,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Cost to provide free yearly tax prep to every US household  || $8,450,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Cost to give every US 18 year-old a free degree at a community college || $46,340,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Additional cost to fund all US schools at magnet school levels || $46,340,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Annual cost to send every US child to a university for free || $127,610,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Cost to buy the Amazon rainforest || $130,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| UBS loss from one rogue trader || $2,300,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| DoE loan to CA Valley Solar Ranch Project || $1,200,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Apple's cash on hand || $76,200,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===New York CIty===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Area !! Combined Property Value
 +
|-
 +
| New York City || $806,490,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Manhattan || $281,040,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Queens || $208,180,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Brooklyn || $201,230,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Staten Island || $61,230,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Bronx || $54,660,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Megaprojects===
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Project !! Cost !! Notes
 +
|-
 +
| National missile defense shield cost through 2013 || $107,690,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| F-22 Raptor program || $67,610,000,000 || halted
 +
|-
 +
| Planned Russian Bering Strait tunnel || $66,000,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Obama's 2011 high-speed rail proposal || $53,000,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Cost to build SF-to-LA high-speed rail || $45,000,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| UK Crossrail || $26,490,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| King Abdullah Economic City || $50,020,000,000 || High-speed rail $9,120,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Hong Kong International airport || $27,120,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Manhattan Project || $24,400,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| 2nd Avenue NYC subway line || $17,960,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Big Dig cost || $18,510,000,000 || as of 2008
 +
|-
 +
| Failed Army intelligence-sharing computer system || $2,700,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Bay Bridge span replacement || $6,300,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Downtown Dubai project || $20,270,000,000 || Burj Khalifa $1,520,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Channel Tunnel || $22,960,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Nimitz-class carrier || $4,930,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Gerald R. Ford-class carrier || $9,000,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Amtrak 30-year plan for northeast corridor || $192,000,000,000 || Randall made a mistake here the value represented by the blocks is $117,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| City Qatar is building to host the 2022 World Cup || $207,000,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Apollo moon landing project || $192,000,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| International Space Station || $138,000,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Space Shuttle program || $194,620,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| US interstate highway system || $465,970,000,000 || The largest single public-works project in the history of mankind
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Federal budget===
 +
 
 +
===Budget options===
 +
Estimates by the Congressional Budget Office of the effect of various hypothetical policy decisions on annual tax revenue, averaged over the next ten years.
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
! Category
 +
! Item
 +
! Price
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="4"|Cost of existing tax cuts (Loss in annual revenue if tax cuts are made permanent)
 +
|-
 +
| 2001 (Bush) tax cuts
 +
| $158,240,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2003 (Bush) capital gains tax cuts
 +
| $27,190,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2010 (Obama) payroll tax cut
 +
| $111,700,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="4"|Potential new taxes (Increase in annual tax revenue if implimented)
 +
|-
 +
| Raise corporate taxes by one percentage point
 +
| $10,060,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Legalize marijuana and tax it at levels similar to tobacco
 +
| $7,020,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Institute tax on CO2 emissions
 +
| $10,060,000,000 (This appears to be a mistake by [[Randall]] and should read $113,000,000,000)
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Stimulus spending===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Item !! Value
 +
|-
 +
| 2008 Total || $205,930,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Individual tax breaks || $120,110,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Student loan guarantees || $33,470,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Business tax breaks || $52,360,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2009 Total || $747,950,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Tax breaks || $307,530,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Education || $90,460,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Medicare/Medicaid || $80,500,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Transportation || $32,560,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Unemployment || $62,740,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Infrastructure || $24,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Other spending || $150,160,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Bailouts===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Item !! Value !! Notes
 +
|-
 +
| 1980s-1990 S&L bailout || $78,300,000,000 || total cost to taxpayers
 +
|-
 +
| Cost to FDIC of bank failures || $19,000,000,000 || resulting from the 2008 financial crisis
 +
|-
 +
| TARP bailout funds distributed || $392,980,000,000 || Out of $700,000,000,000 available
 +
|-
 +
| Estimated TARP taxpayer losses || $41,660,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Value of outstanding TARP assets || $144,440,000 || Randall made a mistake here the chart should read $144,440,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Bailout funds returned || $206,880,000,000 ||
 +
|-
 +
| Current Eurozone bailout fund || $1,361,700,000,000 ||
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Federal Payments===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Item !! Cost
 +
|-
 +
| Annual improper federal payments comprising fraud, abuse, and poorly-documented payments || $125,400,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Federal payments to dead retirees || $120,200,000
 +
|-
 +
| NEA-estimated cost to bring all US schools into good repair || $413,300,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Annual economic cost of unmaintained infrastructure || $129,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Estimated direct annual agricultural value of bees || $220,000,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Military/Security Spending===
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Item !! Cost
 +
|-
 +
| Wasted money in Afghanistan/Iraq war contracts || $60,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Reconstruction money reportedly missing || $18,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Total US spending since 2001 to secure borders || $90,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| US nuclear arms spending during the Cold War || $2,818,300,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Ballistic missile submarines || $451,360,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Ballistic missiles to put on those submarines || $136,690,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| The $87 billion which John Kerry voted for/against || $101,800,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| "Star Wars" missile defence system (1987 Heritage Foundation estimate) || $185,300,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===US Spending on Wars===
 +
Including only direct spending on war operations, and not resulting veterans' benefits or interest on debt incurred.
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! War !! Cost
 +
|-
 +
| World War I || $334,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Spanish-American War || $9,030,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Civil War || $79,740,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| American revolution || $2,410,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 1812 || $1,550,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Mexican War || $2,380,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| World War II || $4,104,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Korean War || $341,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Vietnam War || $738,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Persian Gulf War || $102,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Iraq War || $784,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
  | War in Afghanistan || $321,000,000,000
 +
  |}
 +
 
 +
</div>
 +
 
 +
==Trillions==
 +
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
! Category
 +
! Item
 +
! Price
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="6"|Size of derivatives markets by year
 +
|-
 +
| 1988
 +
| $3,090,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 1995
 +
| $26,690,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2001
 +
| $86,390,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2005
 +
| $227,260,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2009
 +
| $439,000,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="5"|Size of credit default swap market by year (included in derivatives)
 +
|-
 +
| 2001
 +
| $1,150,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2005
 +
| $19,350,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2007
 +
| $66,280,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| 2009
 +
| $31,350,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="5"|US household net worth
 +
|-
 +
| US household
 +
| $58,740,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Poorer half
 +
| $1,470,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Richer half
 +
| $57,270,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Richest 1%
 +
| $19,620,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="6"|Total debt in the US
 +
|-
 +
| Total debt in the US
 +
| $36,560,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| State and local government
 +
| $2,500,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Household
 +
| $13,560,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Federal government
 +
| $9,510,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Business
 +
| $10,980,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="10"|World GDP
 +
|-
 +
| World
 +
| $62,900,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| North America
 +
| $17,850,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| United States
 +
| $14,530,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| South America
 +
| $3,070,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| EU
 +
| $16,240,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Europe (incl. Russia and Turkey)
 +
| $20,130,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Africa
 +
| $1,610,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Asia
 +
| $17,530,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Oceania
 +
| $1,310,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="15"|Total public debt (Note: US figures are from 2011, while the other totals use 2010 debt in 2011 dollars, which is likely an underestimate.)
 +
|-
 +
| EU (total)
 +
| $13,340,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| United States
 +
| $10,200,000,000,000 (Plus internal government borrowing of 4,740,000,000,000)
 +
|-
 +
| Japan
 +
| $8,630,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Germany
 +
| $2,480,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Italy
 +
| $2,140,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| India
 +
| $2,140,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| China
 +
| $1,907,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| France
 +
| $1,767,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| United Kingdom
 +
| $1,654,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Brazil
 +
| $1,281,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Canada
 +
| $1,130,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Spain
 +
| $834,210,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Mexico
 +
| $584,860,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Greece
 +
| $460,180,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="4"|World total proven Energy reserves
 +
|-
 +
| Oil
 +
| $131,960,000,000,000 (November 2011 prices)
 +
|-
 +
| Coal
 +
| $72,850,000,000,000 (2011 central Appalachian prices)
 +
|-
 +
| Natural gas
 +
| $21,470,000,000,000 (2011 NYMEX prices)
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="4"|US Energy Reserves
 +
|-
 +
| Oil
 +
| $20,580,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Coal
 +
| $20,020,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Natural gas
 +
| $930,470,000,000
 +
  |-
 +
  ! rowspan="3"|Value of 10 years of electricity generated if the surface of Texas was converted to:
 +
|-
 +
| Solar power plants
 +
| $89,240,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Wind turbines
 +
| $7,950,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="4"|All US real estate
 +
|-
 +
| All
 +
| $28,380,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Home
 +
| $23,010,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Commercial (includes stores, apartments, industrial, etc.)
 +
| $5,370,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="4"|Total ____ so far
 +
|-
 +
| Value of all gold ever mined (late 2011 prices)
 +
| $9,120,000,000,000
 +
  |-
 +
  | World Total Liquid Assets
 +
| $77,000,000,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| Estimated total economic production of the human race (so far, roughly three-fifths of it since 1980)
 +
| $2,396,950,000,000,000
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
 
 +
===GDP by year===
 +
{|class=wikitable sortable"
 +
|-
 +
! Year !! GDP (total economic activity) the world (minus US) !! GDP (total economic productivity) of the US (minus government) !! US federal government
 +
|-
 +
| 1920 || || ||
 +
|-
 +
| 1930 || || ||
 +
|-
 +
| 1940 || || ||
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1995 || $26,690,000,000,000
+
  | 1942 || || || $500,000,000,000
|-
 
| 2001 || $86,390,000,000,000
 
|-
 
| 2005 || $227,260,000,000,000
 
|-
 
| 2009 || $439,000,000,000,000
 
|}
 
 
 
====Size of credit default swap market by year (included in derivatives)====
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Year !! Size of market
+
  | 1943 || || || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2001 || $1,150,000,000,000
+
  | 1944 || || || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2005 || $19,350,000,000,000
+
  | 1945 || || || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2007 || $66,280,000,000,000
+
  | 1946 || || || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2009 || $31,350,000,000,000
+
  | 1947 || || $2,000,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
 
 
===US household net worth===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Worth
+
  | 1948 || || $2,000,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | US household || $58,740,000,000,000
+
  | 1949 || || $2,000,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Poorer half || $1,470,000,000,000
+
  | 1950 || || $2,500,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Richer half || $57,270,000,000,000
+
  | 1951 || || $2,500,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Richest 1% || $19,620,000,000,000
+
  | 1952 || || $2,500,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Total debt in the US===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Worth
+
  | 1953 || || $2,500,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Total debt in the US || $36,580,000,000,000
+
  | 1954 || || $2,500,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | State and local government || $2,500,000,000,000
+
  | 1955 || || $3,000,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Household || $13,560,000,000,000
+
  | 1956 || || $3,000,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Federal government || $9,510,000,000,000
+
  | 1957 || || $3,000,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Business || $10,980,000,000,000
+
  | 1958 || || $3,000,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===World GDP===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Area !! GDP
+
  | 1959 || || $3,500,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | World || $62,900,000,000,000
+
  | 1960 || || $3,500,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | North America || $17,850,000,000,000
+
  | 1961 || || $3,500,000,000,000 || $500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | United States || $14,530,000,000,000
+
  | 1962 || || $3,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | South America || $3,070,000,000,000
+
  | 1963 || || $4,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | EU || $16,240,000,000,000
+
  | 1964 || || $4,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Europe (incl. Russia and Turkey) || $20,130,000,000,000
+
  | 1965 || || $4,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Africa || $1,610,000,000,000
+
  | 1966 || || $4,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Asia || $17,530,000,000,000
+
  | 1967 || || $5,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Oceania || $1,310,000,000,000
+
  | 1968 || || $5,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Total public debt===
 
(Note: US figures are from 2011, while the other totals use 2010 debt in 2011 dollars, which is likely an underestimate.)
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Area !! Debt !! Notes
+
  | 1969 || || $5,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | EU (total) || $13,340,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1970 || || $5,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | United States || $10,200,000,000,000 || (Plus internal government borrowing of 4,740,000,000,000)
+
  | 1971 || || $5,500,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Japan || $8,630,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1972 || || $6,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Germany || $2,480,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1973 || || $6,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Italy || $2,140,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1974 || || $6,000,000,000,000 || $1,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | India || $2,140,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1975 || || $5,500,000,000,000 || $1,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | China || $1,907,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1976 || || $6,000,000,000,000 || $1,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | France || $1,767,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1977 || || $6,000,000,000,000 || $1,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | United Kingdom || $1,654,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1978 || || $6,500,000,000,000 || $1,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Brazil || $1,281,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1979 || || $7,000,000,000,000 || $1,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Canada || $1,130,000,000,000 ||
+
  | 1980 || $19,000,000,000,000 || $6,500,000,000,000 || $1,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Spain || $834,210,000,000 ||
+
  | 1981 || $19,000,000,000,000 || $6,500,000,000,000 || $1,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Mexico || $584,860,000,000 ||
+
  | 1982 || $19,000,000,000,000 || $6,000,000,000,000 || $1,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Greece || $460,180,000,000 ||
+
  | 1983 || $20,000,000,000,000 || $6,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
 
 
===Energy reserves===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Type of energy !! World total proven [type] reserves !! US Reserves
+
  | 1984 || $20,000,000,000,000 || $7,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Oil || $131,960,000,000,000 (November 2011 prices) || $20,580,000,000,000
+
  | 1985 || $22,000,000,000,000 || $7,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Coal || $72,850,000,000,000 (2011 central Appalachian prices) || $20,020,000,000,000
+
  | 1986 || $23,000,000,000,000 || $7,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Natural gas || $21,470,000,000,000 (2011 NYMEX prices) || $930,470,000,000
+
  | 1987 || $23,500,000,000,000 || $7,500,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Value of 10 years of electricity generated if the surface of Texas was converted to:===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Thing !! Value
+
  | 1988 || $25,000,000,000,000 || $8,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Solar power plants || $89,240,000,000,000
+
  | 1989 || $26,000,000,000,000 || $8,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Wind turbines || $7,950,000,000,000
+
  | 1990 || $27,000,000,000,000 || $8,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===All US real estate===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Type !! Value
+
  | 1991 || $27,000,000,000,000 || $8,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | All || $28,380,000,000,000
+
  | 1992 || $31,000,000,000,000 || $8,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Home || $23,010,000,000,000
+
  | 1993 || $32,500,000,000,000 || $8,500,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Commercial (includes stores, apartments, industrial, etc.) || $5,370,000,000,000
+
  | 1994 || $33,000,000,000,000 || $9,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Value of all gold ever mined===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Value
+
  | 1995 || $34,000,000,000,000 || $9,000,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Value of all gold ever mined (late 2011 prices) || $9,120,000,000,000
+
  | 1996 || $34,500,000,000,000 || $9,500,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Liquid Assets===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Item !! Value
+
  | 1997 || $36,500,000,000,000 || $9,500,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | World Total Liquid Assets || $77,000,000,000,000
+
  | 1998 || $36,500,000,000,000 || $10,500,000,000,000 || $2,000,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
 
 
===GDP by year===
 
{|class=wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
  ! Year !! GDP (total economic activity) the world (minus US) !! GDP (total economic productivity) of the US (minus government) !! US federal government
+
  | 1999 || $37,000,000,000,000 || $10,500,000,000,000 || $2,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1920 || || ||
+
  | 2000 || $39,000,000,000,000 || $10,500,000,000,000 || $2,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1930 || || ||
+
  | 2001 || $39,000,000,000,000 || $10,500,000,000,000 || $2,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1940 || || ||
+
  | 2002 || $41,000,000,000,000 || $10,500,000,000,000 || $2,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1950 || || ||
+
  | 2003 || $42,500,000,000,000 || $11,000,000,000,000 || $2,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1960 || || ||
+
  | 2004 || $45,000,000,000,000 || $11,500,000,000,000 || $2,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1970 || || ||
+
  | 2005 || $46,500,000,000,000 || $11,500,000,000,000 || $3,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1980 || || ||
+
  | 2006 || $50,000,000,000,000 || $12,000,000,000,000 || $3,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 1990 || || ||
+
  | 2007 || $53,000,000,000,000 || $12,000,000,000,000 || $3,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2000 || || ||
+
  | 2008 || $57,500,000,000,000 || $11,500,000,000,000 || $3,000,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | 2010 || || ||
+
  | 2009 || $56,500,000,000,000 || $11,000,000,000,000 || $3,500,000,000,000
|}
 
 
 
===Estimated total economic production of the human race (so far)===
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
 
  |-
 
  |-
! Thing !! Value !! Notes
+
| 2010 || $61,000,000,000,000 || $11,500,000,000,000 || $3,500,000,000,000
 
  |-
 
  |-
  | Estimated total economic production of the human race (so far) || $2,396,950,000,000,000 || (roughly three-fifths of it since 1980)
+
  | 2011 || $64,500,000,000,000 || $11,500,000,000,000 || $4,000,000,000,000
 
  |}
 
  |}
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:0980}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:0980}}

Revision as of 01:01, 15 April 2019

Below are five tables listing the prices of the items in 980: Money.


Ambox notice.png This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: Many items are missing from the Billions section. If you can organize the Millions, Billions and Trillions sections please do. Also we need someone to double-check the values.
If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks.

Dollars

Category Item Price
Dollar bills
$1 Bill $1
$10 Bill $10
$500 Bill (William McKinley, discontinued) $500
$1000 Bill (Grover Cleveland, discontinued) $1000
Fruit
Apples (one dozen) $5.68
Oranges (one dozen) $3.08
Fast Food
Dollar menu item $1.00
Starbucks Coffee $2.00
Average US Restaurant Meals
Average single US restaurant meal $35.65
Average meal at the 20 costliest San Francisco restaurants $85.27
Dinner for four
Homemade rice and pinto beans $9.26 (With time cost of two hours of shopping, travel, prep and cleanup: $41.80)
Homemade chicken dinner $13.78 (With time cost of two hours of shopping, travel, prep and cleanup: $46.32)
McDonalds $27.89 (With time cost of 30 minutes travel: $36.03)
Arby’s $34.00 (With time cost of 30 minutes travel: $42.13)
Chili’s $69.64 (With time cost of 30 minutes travel: $77.78)
Outback Steakhouse $109.82 (With time cost of 30 minutes travel: $117.96)
Vehicles
Low-end bicycle $190
Clothes
Men's suit $400
Debt
Daily interest on average credit card debt $5.63
Daily income
Median household daily income $136.28
Taxes $32.16
After-tax $104.12
Game Consoles
PS3 $250
Xbox 360 $200
Wii $150
Electronics
Kindle Fire $199
Basic iPad $499
iPad + 3G + a year of data $869
Basic Macbook Air $999
Netbook $249.99
iPod Nano $129
Mac Mini $599
Comcast cable internet for a year ($59.99/month) $719.88
Books
Paperback book $6.80
Hardcover book $32.27
Audio book $50.42
Kindle $79.00
New video game $49.99
Kindle keyboard + 3G $139
Loose change
Loose change per pound $12.80
Loose change with no quarters $5.40
One-gallon jug of loose change $270
Loose change with no pennies $17.40
Annual value of pennies received in change (at one daily cash purchase) $7.30
Pet ownership (Based on ASPCA estimations)
Annual cost of rabbit ownership $730
Annual cost of dog ownership $695
Annual cost of cat ownership $670
Annual cost of fish ownership $35
Annual cost of bird ownership $200
Annual cost of small mammal ownership $300
Cell phone bill
Traditional cell phone average annual bill $928.30
Smartphone average annual bill $1,320
Worker/CEO comparison
1965 production worker average hourly wage $19.61
2007 production worker average hourly wage $19.71
Typical 1965 CEO pay for the same period $490.31
Typical 2007 CEO pay for the same period $5419.97

Thousands

Category Item Price
Typical household net worth by head of household’s age in 1984
<35 years $11,680
35-44 years $72,090
45-54 years $115,060
55-64 years $149,240
>65 years $122,100
Typical household net worth by head of household’s age in 2009
<35 years $3,710
35-44 years $40,140
45-54 years $103,040
55-64 years $164,270
>65 years $172,820
Raising a child to age 17
Upper income $302,860
Middle income $206,920
Lower income $150,380
Vacations
All-inclusive one-week trip for two to St. Lucia resort from New England (incl. flights) $3,204
Twenty week-long Hawaiian vacations $136,020
Typical week-long Hawaii trip for two from US West Coast (incl. flights) $6,801
Typical weekend Hawaii trip for two from US West Coast incl. flights) $2,863
School Prices
Estimated one-year Hogwarts cost (incl. tuition) $43,000
Seven-year Hogwarts degree $301,000
Average community college tuition $10,340 (One year $2,580)
Average in-state university tuition $28,920 (One year $7,230)
Income per capita (2005)
United States 2005 per capita income $32,360
Switzerland 2005 per capita income $29,910
Germany 2005 per capita income $27,550
UK 2005 per capita income $23,240
France 2005 per capita income $16,400
China 2005 per capita income $3,540
Brazil 2005 per capita income $5,540
Houses
Small rural house $100,000
Typical new home $224,910
Health
Average individual health insurance annual premium $5,430
Cancer treatment including chemo $117,260
Annual Household Costs
A daily pack of cigarettes for a year (NJ) $3,050
One Starbucks latte per day $1,820
Average smartphone annual cost $1,320
Annual cost of car ownership $3,650
Typical annual household spending $5,650
Average household CC debt $9,960
Annual cost to carry that debt $2,090
Typical annual housing costs
NYC $25,416
San Francisco $21,888
Boston $18,216
Los Angeles $17,640
Washington DC $16,380
Chicago $13,664
Worcester $12,456
Houston $11,888
Minneapolis $10,908
Detroit $10,080
Salt Lake City $9,108
Scranton $8,604
Prince William and Kate Middleton's Wedding
Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding cake $78,000
Kate Middleton's wedding dress $350,000
Flower cost for Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding $800,000
Value of an investment of $1,000/year

(NOT accounting for inflation) for 30 years with 5% annual interest

1 year $1,000
5 years $5,526
10 years $12,850
15 years $21,580
20 years $33,070
25 years $47,730
30 years $66,440
30 years ($30,000 saved in mattress) $30,000
30 years ($1,000/yr at 4% real return (long-term stock + divident average) $56,080
Value of investment (accounting for inflation)
30 years $27,370
30 years ($30,000 saved in mattress) $12,360
Average Vehicle Costs
Average used car $8,910
Average new car $27,230
High-end bicycle $1,500
Total cost to buy and own selected vehicles for five years
Honda Insight $27,874
Toyota Prius $38,771
Jeep Patriot $35,425
Honda Fit $28,745
BMW Z4 $61,312
Ford Explorer $45,524
Toyota Camry $34,697
smart fortwo $29,629
Honda CR-V $35,183
Chevy Volt $42,180
Hyundai Sonata $34,644
Ford F-150 $48,734
Nissan Cube $29,383
Porsche 911 $91,590
Total cost to buy and own selected vehicles for five years if gas were $10/gallon
Toyota Prius $48,990
Honda Fit $45,233
Ford Explorer $69,076
smart fortwo $45,058
Chevy Volt $50,612
Ford F-150 $77,111
Typical annual household income
Bottom 20% $10,200
Second 20% $24,800
Middle 20% $44,400
Fourth 20% $76,100
Top 10% $201,100
Top 1% $822,000
Top 1/500th $2,080,000
Median US household income
Median US household income $51,570
After-tax $39,170
Taxes $12,100
Total lifetime income from ages 25-65 at $50,000/year after 25% taxes (including Social Security) $1,500,000
Cost per household served by US Rural Utilities Service program to expand broadband access $359,790
If I had $1000000 (Cost of the items the singer in "If I had $1000000" would buy in order to win your love: $263,330)
Furniture $21,160
Plymouth Reliant $3,000
Tree fort $15,000
Llama $2,120
Joseph Merrick's remains N/A (Held in Royal London Hospital collection and not available for purchase)
House $224,820
Tiny fridge $99.08
Gourmet pre-wrapped sausages (2) $34.48
Kraft Dinner (two double servings) $3.06
Expensive ketchup $10.75
Faux fur coat $198.00
Limo ride to the store $186.59
Luxuries
Golden Opulence ice cream sundae $1,000
Waist deep half-room ball pit $2,400
All 30 bestselling game consoles (refurb, eBay) $2,640
Initial seat on Virgin Galactic suborbital flight $200,000
Video Games
Typing F-U-N-D-S $10,000
Daily sales of Minecraft $193,500

Millions

Category Item Price
Dr. Evil
Amount Dr. Evil thought he was demanding from the 1997 world $6,630,000
Amount he was actually demanding $1,380,000
Video Games
Minecraft sales by October 2011 $56,780,000
William and Kate's wedding
Flowers $800,000
Security $20,000,000
Total cost $80,000,000
Human Values
Amount needed to live comfortably off investments $4,090,000
EPA value of a human life $8,120,000
Six Million Dollar Man (2011 dollars) $29,870,000
50,000 salary for 40 years after 25% taxes $1,500,000
Lifetime cost to avoid changing your oil by abandoning your car and buying a new one whenever you hit 5.000 miles $3,270,000
Corporation Expenses
30-second Super Bowl ad slot $3,000,000
Annual cost to run Wikipedia $18,500,000
Loss in NewsCorp value over hacking scandal $750,000,000
Vehicles
Most expensive production car (Bugatti Veyron) $2,400,000
Most expensive car ever sold (1957 Ferrari 250) $16,390,000
Marginal cost to launch one shuttle $450,000,000
Total shuttle program per launch $1,451,000,000
One B-2 bomber $2,500,000,000
Structures
Large city office building $100,000,000
Dubai Fountain $224,540,000
Burj Khalifa $1,521,000,000
New Yankee Stadium $1,545,000,000
Rare Items
Qianlong Chinese vase sold in 2010 $83,710,000
Leonardo’s Codex Leicester (bought by Bill Gates) $45,930,000
Estimated value of first-edition Gutenberg Bible $34,610,000
Double Eagle coin (All destroyed uncirculated save a few stolen from the US Mint) $9,330,000
Treskilling Yellow postage stamp (At $50 billion/lb possibly the world’s most expensive thing by weight) $2,780,000
1297 Magna Carta original copy signed by Edward I $21,890,000
Painting from The Card Players series (rumor) $250,000,000
Willem de Kooning’s “Woman III” (2006 auction bought by David Geffen) $168,780,000
Jackson Pollock’s “No. 5, 1948” (2006 auction bought by David Geffen) $153,440,000
Airbus A380 $264,000,000
Mona Lisa assessed value $730,660,000
Bitcoins
Market value of all Bitcoins as of 11/2011 $22,819,797
Market value of all Bitcoins as at July 2011 peak price $210,000,000
Millionaires
Darell Issa (R-CA) net worth $304,000,000
Jane Harman (D-CA) net worth $294,000,000
John Kerry (D-MA) net worth $239,000,000
Mitt Romney net worth $210,000,000
Jon Huntsmann net worth $40,000,000
Average net worth of US senator $13,400,000
Average net worth of US representative $4,900,000
A billionare $1,000,000,000
Per US resident
$1 per US resident $312,620,000
$1 per US household $117,290,000
$10 from every US resident $3,326,200,000
$10 from every US household $1,179,180,000
Raptors
One F-22 raptor $154,500,000
One velociraptor (25% of Jurassic Park production budget amortized over three velociraptors) $1,930,000
Professional rapper net worth
50 Cent $100,000,000
50 Cent (stage name) $0.50
50 Cent (adjusted for inflation) $0.70
Birdman $100,000,000
Dr Dre $125,000,000
Jay-Z $450,000,000
Diddy $475,000,000
J.K. Rowling
J.K. Rowling $1,000,000,000
J. K. Rowling had she become a rapper (Professional assessment by rapper/geek culture expert MC Frontalot) $82,000
Hurricanes
Annual hurricane forecast R&D funding $20,000,000
Hurricane forecast improvement funding since 1989 $440,000,000
Economic savings--during Hurricane Irene alone--due to limiting evacuations made possible by recent forecast advances $700,000,000

Prizes

Amount Year Show/Movie Amount Today
$64,000 1955 The $64,000 Question $528,310
£1,000,000 1998 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (UK) $2,270,000
$1,000,000 1999 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (USA) $1,330,000
$1,000,000 1955 The Millionaire (TV Show) $8,250,000
$1,000,000 1931 The Millionaire (Movie) $14,530,000

Elections

Person Funds raised
2012 presidential fundraising $188,260,000
Herman Cain $5,380,000
Jon Huntsman $4,510,000
Michele Bachmann $9,870,000
Ron Paul $12,790,000
Rick Perry $17,200,000
Mitt Romney $32,610,000
Barack Obama $88,420,000
Other $17,480,000
Person Funds raised
2008 presidential campaign fundraising $1,860,390,000
Excluding candidate Lee L. Mercer, Jr of Houston, who claimed, in his combined FEC filings, $900,005,507 in fundraising and $900,006,431 in campaign spending.
Ron Paul $32,480,000
John Edwards $64,410,000
Rudy Giuliani $66,520,000
Mitt Romney $116,730,000
Barack Obama $799,670,000
John McCain $394,280,000
Hilary Clinton $259,050,000
Other $127,250,000
Person Funds raised
2004 presidential campaign fundraising $1,006,810,000
Howard Dean $61,620,000
Wesley Clark $34,620,000
John Edwards $39,310,000
John Kerry $352,090,000
George W. Bush $429,660,000
Other $89,510,000
Person Funds raised
2000 presidential campaign fundraising $805,120,000
Pat Buchanan $37,440,000
John McCain $75,180,000
Bill Bradley $65,680,000
Steve Forbes $114,400,000 *The Money Chart incorrectly reads $11,440,000
Al Gore $170,520,000
George W. Bush $247,100,000
Other $94,800,000

2010 midterm elections fundraising

Party Funds raised
Democrats $815,000,000
Republicans $587,000,000

2011-2012 Campaign donations by industry

Industry To Democrats (approx) To Republicans (approx) To Other (approx) Total Funds donated
Finance industry $47,000,000 $68,000,000 $7,000,000 $122,900,000
Organized labor $14,000,000 $2,000,000 $2,000,000 $18,720,000
Energy industry $6,000,000 $21,000,000 $0 $26,680,000
Lawyers and general lobbyists $39,000,000 $19,000,000 $0 $57,590,000
Health industry $19,000,000 $23,000,000 $0 $42,727,000
Electronics and communication industry $21,000,000 $12,000,000 $7,000,000 $32,420,000

Inaugurations

Thing Price
Barack Obama’s 2009 inauguration $174,100,000
Festivities (private donors) $46,400,000
Federal + state + local government (mainly security) $127,700,000
Thing Price
George Bush’s 2005 inauguration $178,600,000
Festivities (private donors) $47,800,000
Federal + state + local government (mainly security) $130,800,000

Past presidential campaign fundraising

Campaign Year Funds raised
1996 $559,810,000
1992 $521,480,000
1988 $606,300,000
1984 $429,860,000
1980 $434,220,000
1976 $664,160,000

Value of a solid gold toilet (626 lbs) by year

Year Value (Approximate)
1967 $2,000,000
1968 $2,000,000
1969 $2,000,000
1970 $2,000,000
1971 $2,000,000
1972 $3,000,000
1973 $4,000,000
1974 $7,000,000
1975 $6,000,000
1976 $4,000,000
1977 $5,000,000
1978 $6,000,000
1979 $9,000,000
1980 $15,000,000
1981 $10,000,000
1982 $8,000,000
1983 $9,000,000
1984 $7,000,000
1985 $6,000,000
1986 $7,000,000
1987 $8,000,000
1988 $7,000,000
1989 $6,000,000
1990 $6,000,000
1991 $5,000,000
1992 $5,000,000
1993 $5,000,000
1994 $5,000,000
1995 $5,000,000
1996 $5,000,000
1997 $4,000,000
1998 $4,000,000
1999 $3,000,000
2000 $3,000,000
2001 $3,000,000
2002 $3,000,000
2003 $4,000,000
2004 $4,000,000
2005 $5,000,000
2006 $6,000,000
2007 $8,000,000
2008 $8,000,000
2009 $10,000,000
2010 $13,000,000
2011 $15,000,000

Value of a carry-on suitcase full of $100 bills (30,00 ct, 60lbs)

Year Value (Approximate)
1967 $20,000,000
1968 $19,000,000
1969 $18,000,000
1970 $17,000,000
1971 $16,000,000
1972 $16,000,000
1973 $15,000,000
1974 $13,000,000
1975 $12,000,000
1976 $12,000,000
1977 $11,000,000
1978 $10,000,000
1979 $9,000,000
1980 $8,000,000
1981 $7,000,000
1982 $7,000,000
1983 $7,000,000
1984 $6,000,000
1985 $6,000,000
1986 $6,000,000
1987 $6,000,000
1988 $6,000,000
1989 $5,000,000
1990 $5,000,000
1991 $5,000,000
1992 $5,000,000
1993 $5,000,000
1994 $4,000,000
1995 $4,000,000
1996 $4,000,000
1997 $4,000,000
1998 $4,000,000
1999 $4,000,000
2000 $4,000,000
2001 $4,000,000
2002 $4,000,000
2003 $4,000,000
2004 $4,000,000
2005 $3,000,000
2006 $3,000,000
2007 $3,000,000
2008 $3,000,000
2009 $3,000,000
2010 $3,000,000
2011 $3,000,000


Billions

Harry Potter movie franchise total revenue

Item Value
Harry Potter movie franchise total revenue $21,000,000,000
Treasure found in a temple in India in 2011 $22,000,000,000

Box office revenue

Adjusted for monetary inflation but not ticket price inflation Hilighted [sic]: films that earned more than 2009's Avatar

Year Movie Revenue Highlighted
2009 Avatar $783,510,000
2008 The Dark Knight $547,520,000
2003 Shrek 3 $516,610,000
1999 The Phantom Menace $572,000,000
1997 Titanic $827,260,000 Yes
1994 Lion King $625,810,000
1993 Jurassic Park $625,810,000
1984 Ghostbusters $507,720,000
1983 Return of the Jedi $686,710,000
1982 E.T. $996,580,000 Yes
1980 The Empire Strikes Back $778,530,000
1977 Star Wars $1,681,000,000 Yes
1975 Jaws $1,067,510,000 Yes
1973 The Exorcist $1,019,000,000 Yes
1965 The Sound of Music $1,144,920,000 Yes
1962 101 Dalmatians $1,131,310,000 Yes
1960 Ben-Hur $561,090,000
1957 The Ten Commandments $532,570,000
1943 Bambi $1,391,000,000 Yes
1942 Fantasia $1,146,000,000 Yes
1940 Gone with the Wind $3,157,000,000 Yes
1938 Snow White $2,841,700,000 Yes


Charity

Area Amount given
US annual charitable giving $294,850,000,000
To religious organizations $102,000,000,000
To educational organizations $42,240,000,000
To foundations $33,450,000,000
To human services $26,850,000,000
To societal benefit organizations $24,570,000,000
To health organizations $23,140,000,000
To international affairs $15,980,000,000
To arts and culture $13,460,000,000
To animals and environment $6,750,000,000

Type of giving:

Type Amount given
Individual giving $214,650,000,000
Foundation grantmaking $41,560,000,000
Bequests $23,140,000,000
Corporate giving $15,500,000,000

Gates Foundation total giving since 1994

Area Amount given
Gates Foundation total giving since 1994 $25,360,000,000
Global health ~$12,000,000,000
US ~$4,000,000,000
Developments ~$3,000,000,000
Grants ~$1,000,000,000

Book publishing industry revenue

Genre Revenue
Book publishing industry revenue $28,320,000,000
Romance $1,380,000,000
Trade books $14,130,000,000
K-12 $5,570,000,000
Professional $3,750,000,000
Higher education $4,560,000,000

Video game industry revenue

Area Revenue
Video game industry revenue $48,900,000,000
United States $18,830,000,000

Education

Item Value
Student loans outstanding $955,800,000,000
Federal student loans $792,900,000,000
Defaulted Federal student loans (Private total unknown) $65,020,000,000
Private student loans $163,900,000,000
Total spending on primary and secondary education in the US $612,470,000,000
Teacher Salaries $295,810,000,000
Total annual higher education spending in the US $355,110,000,000

Harvard University revenue

Area Revenue
Tuition, donations, and fees $1,425,000,000
Investments $7,900,000,000

In other words, if Harvard completely eliminated tuition, it would mean roughly a 15% budget cut.

Education foundations

Foundation Amount given
Gates Foundation $36,700,000,000
INGKA Foundation $36,000,000,000
Howard Hughes Medical Institute $14,800,000,000
Ford Foundation $13,800,000,000
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation $6,100,000,000

Endowments of the 63 wealthiest universities

University Endowments
Endowments of the 63 wealthiest universities $277,570,000,000
Harvard $32,000,000,000
Yale $19,400,000,000
Princeton $17,100,000,000
U of Texas $16,610,000,000
Stanford $16,500,000,000
MIT $9,900,000,000
Columbia $7,800,000,000
U of Michigan $7,800,000,000
Texas A&M $7,030,000,000
Northwestern $7,030,000,000

Corporate revenue

Corporation Revenue Profit Loss
Walmart $421,800,000,000 $16,390,000,000
ExxonMobil $354,700,000,000 $30,460,000,000
Chevron $196,300,000,000 $19,020,000,000
Fannie Mae $153,800,000,000 $14,010,000,000
GE $151,600,000,000 $11,640,000,000
Berkshire Hathaway $136,100,000,000 $12,970,000,000
PepsiCo $57,840,000,000 $6,320,000,000
Coca-Cola $35,840,000,000 $11,800,000,000
VISA $8,100,000,000 $2,700,000,000
MasterCard $5,500,000,000 $1,850,000,000
General Motors $135,600,000,000 $6,170,000,000
Ford $129,000,000,000 $6,560,000,000
Chrysler $44,950,000,000 $653,000,000
AT&T $124,600,000,000 $19,860,000,000
Verizon $106,560,000,000 $2,550,000,000
Bank of America $134,20,000,000 $2,240,000,000
JP Morgan Chase $115,480,000,000 $17,370,000,000
Citigroup $111,060,000,000 $10,600,000,000
AGI $104,420,000,000 $17,370,000,000
HP $126,000,000,000 $8,780,000,000
Apple $65,230,000,000 $14,010,000,000
Microsoft $62,480,000,000 $18,760,000,000
Google $29,320,000,000 $8,510,000,000
Combined annual profit of the Fortune 500 companies $708,600,000,000

US health care spending

Category Item Price
US cancer spending
US spending on lung cancer treatment $11,310,000,000
US spending on tobacco marketing $13,600,000,000
US spending on all cancer treatment $106,870,000,000
US spending on cigarettes $91,660,000,000
US health care spending (2005 data)
Private insurance $785,900,000,000
Out-of-pocket $282,260,000,000
Other private spending $79,000,000,000
Total private spending $1,147,050,000,000
Medicare $387,070,000,000
Medicaid $351,980,000,000
Other government spending $219,000,000,000
Total Government spending $958,950,000,000
Total $2,106,000,000,000

Total annual tax breaks to the five largest oil companies

Item Value
Combined pay at Wall St. banks and securities firms $135,000,000,000
Mobile computing annual sales $220,000,000,000
Online spending in 2009 $251,070,000,000
NCAA budget $5,640,000,000
Total annual tax breaks to the five largest oil companies $2,100,000,000
US annual oil and gas subsidies $41,000,000,000
Ethanol subsidies $5,000,000,000
Combined annual profits of the ten largest health insurance companies $12,870,000,000
2010 lobbying $3,560,000,000
2005 lobbying $2,750,000,000
2000 lobbying $2,000,000,000
One B-2 bomber $2,500,000,000

US R&D

Item Value
US annual corporate R&D $334,490,000,000
Information technology $46,560,000,000
Scientific technical, or professional services $31,060,000,000
Manufacturing industries (Unlabelled on the money chart) $236,151,000,000
Other $20,710,000,000

US GDP

Combined economic value of all goods and services produced in a year

Item Value
US GDP $14,545,950,000,000
Government $1,980,640,000,000
Real estate $1,925,210,000,000
Non-rental Real estate $1,737,500,000,000
Rental and leasing $187,610,000,000
Nondurable goods $739,300,000,000
Food, beverage, and tobacco $212,330,000,000
Chemicals $223,050,000,000
Petroleum and coal $123,630,000,000
Apparel $12,050,000,000
Paper products $57,800,000,000
Plastics and rubber products $58,410,000,000
Textile mills $18,130,000,000
Printing and related supports $33,790,000,000
Durable goods $898,420,000,000
Computers and electronics $212,640,000,000
Metal products $125,590,000,000
Machinery $116,110,000,000
Wood products $21,530,000,000
Furniture $24,930,000,000
Motor vehicles, trailers, and parts $80,560,000,000
Other transportation equipment $93,440,000,000
Mineral products $39,360,000,000
Metals $44,710,000,000
Electrical equipment and components $53,260,000,000
Miscellaneous $81,390,000,000
Finance and insurance $1,207,030,000,000
Federal Reserve banks and credit intermediaries $529,540,000,000
Insurance $437,340,000,000
Investments $180,500,000,000
Funds and trusts $59,550,000,000
Professional and business services $1,752,750,000,000
Waste management $39,870,000,000
Administrative and support services $358,110,000,000
Legal services $225,830,000,000
Computer systems design and service $174,730,000,000
Corporate management $253,950,000,000
Other professional or technical services $700,250,000,000
Health and education $1,294,580,000,000
Social assistance $93,750,000,000
Ambulatory health care services $529,750,000,000
Hospitals $466,390,000,000
Educational services $159,580,000,000
Utilities $276,210,000,000
Other services $345,540,000,000
Construction $553,750,000,000
Retail trade $844,380,000,000
Wholesale trade $804,410,000,000
Mining $248,080,000,000
Mining (other than oil and gas) $50,380,000,000
Mining support $51,270,000,000
Oil and gas $145,990,000,000
Agriculture $137,120,000,000
Farms $107,140,000,000
Forestry, fishing, and related $30,080,000,000
Arts and entertainment $528,620,000,000
Food service $285,480,000,000
Performing arts, sports, and museums $73,040,000,000
Amusements, gambling, and general recreation $73,040,000,000 This appears to be a mistake by Randall and should read $58,110,000,000
Accommodation $111,990,000,000
Information $658,630,000,000
Broadcasting and telecommunications $366,560,000,000
Information and data processing $78,300,000,000
Film, video, and sound recording $61,610,000,000
Publishing (including software) $152,170,000,000
Transportation and storage $401,280,000,000
Warehousing and storage $40,590,000,000
Water $14,730,000,000
Air $36,770,000,000 This appears to be a mistake by Randall and should read $63,680,000,000
Rail $31,730,000,000
Truck $116,520,000,000
Transit and land passenger $24,110,000,000
Pipeline $12,360,000,000
Other transport) $97,560,000,000

Billionaires

Category Person Networth Ten Richest Ranking
Technology
Carlos Slim Helú and family $74,000,000,000 First
Bill Gates $56,000,000,000 Second
Larry Ellison $39,500,000,000 Fifth
Larry Page $19,800,000,000
Sergey Brin $19,800,000,000
Jeff Bezos $18,000,000,000
Steve Ballmer $14,500,000,000
Mark Zuckerberg $13,500,000,000
Paul Allen $13,500,000,000
Steve Jobs (D) $8,300,000,000
Eric Schmidt $7,000,000,000
Sean Parker $1,600,000,000
Steve Case $1,300,000,000
Politicians and alleged evil plutocratic puppet masters
Warren Buffett $50,000,000,000 Third
Charles Koch $22,000,000,000
David Koch $22,000,000,000
Michael Bloomberg $18,100,000,000
George Soros $14,000,000,000
Silvio Berlusconi and family $7,800,000,000
Rupert Murdoch $7,600,000,000
David Geffen $6,000,000,000
Uncategorized
Bernard Arnault $41,000,000,000 Fourth
Lakshmi Mittal $31,100,000,000 Sixth
Amancio Ortega $31,000,000,000 Seventh
Eike Batista $30,000,000,000 Eighth
Mukesh Ambani $27,000,000,000 Ninth
Walmart
Christy Walton and family $26,500,000,000 Tenth
Jim Walton $21,300,000,000
Alice Walton $21,200,000,000
S. Robson Walton $21,000,000,000
Fictional (source: Forbes)
Carlisle Cullen $34,500,000,000
Scrooge McDuck $33,500,000,000
Bruce Wayne $6,500,000,000
Artemis Fowl $1,900,000,000
Fashion
Lilianne Bettencourt $23,500,000,000
Ralph Lauren $5,800,000,000
Ronald Lauder $3,100,000,000
Art and media
George Lucas $3,200,000,000
Oprah Winfrey $3,200,000,000
Five wealthiest rappers combined $1,250,000,000
J. K. Rowling $1,000,000,000
Donald Trump
Donald Trump $2,700,000,000

Combined net worth of the world's 1,210 billionaires $4,500,000,000,000

Corporations

by market capitalization (combined value of all stock)

Company Value
Saudi Aramco (State-owned company--estimated market value) $2,940,000,000,000
Apple $358,310,000,000
ExxonMobil $357,910,000,000
PetroChina $280,160,000,000
IBM $211,640,000,000
Microsoft $211,340,000,000
Bank of China $208,810,000,000
China Mobile $201,510,000,000
Royal Dutch Shell $199,780,000,000
Nestle $193,700,000,000
Chevron $188,030,000,000
Facebook 2011 valuation $70,000,000,000
AT&T attempted T-Mobile purchase $39,000,000,000
Facebook 2010 valuation $33,450,000,000
Zynga 2011 valuation $14,000,000,000
LivingSocial 2011 valuation $2,980,000,000


Cost to buy the world a coke

Item Cost
Cost to buy the world a coke (2011 wholesale prices) $2,240,000,000
Coca-Cola's annual marketing budget $2,980,000,000
Cost to teach the world to sing (four half-hour lessons at $30 each) $840,000,000,000

US household income

State government spending

[map without amounts]

Total US states' debt $46,000,000,000

US foreign military aid

Area Amount
Total $11,010,000,000
Afghanistan $5,800,000,000
Israel $2,410,000,000
Egypt $1,320,000,000
Other $5,800,000,000

US foreign humanitarian and economic aid

Area Amount
Total $11,010,000,000
Iraq and Afghanistan $5,370,000,000
West Bank and Ghana $1,050,000,000
Africa (total) $8,850,000,000
Other $19,130,000,000

Ft. Knox gold reserves

Item Value
Ft. Knox gold reserves (November 2011 prices) $245,900,000,000
Unclaimed US treasury bonds $16,000,000,000
All the tea in China $4,210,000,000

Corporate tax deduction

(Note: some of the corporate deductions are very technical, and even with the help of a technical accountant, I had trouble making sense of them. The text below is my best attempt at an English interpretation of the legalese.)

Area Deductions
Corporate tax deduction $125,180,000,000
Reduced tax on first $10 million of corporate income $3,240,000,000
Delay of taxes on 'income' made from defaulting on a debt (Temporary stimulus measure) $21,390,000,000
Temporary change to equipment depreciation rules allowing more (and sooner) deductions on the purchase of new equipment $24,390,000,000
Clean energy, space, science, and tech R&D $13,900,000,000
Miscellaneous rules for international corporate finance $6,800,000,000
Foreign corporation income financing rules $13,680,000,000

Individual tax deductions

These are types of income, or uses of income, which the government has partly or fully exempt from tax, often to encourage some activity. This can be thought of as "spent" tax revenue, although it's not quite that simple; there's no guarantee that removing the deduction would add that amount of revenue, because the presence of the deduction may be affecting taxpayers' spending habits.

Area Deductions
Small business health insurance $1,620,000,000
Federal employee expenses abroad $7,910,000,000
EITC (anti-poverty low-income tax credit) $78,760,000,000
Donations to charity $39,130,000,000
Capital gains (investment income) $78,760,000,000
Pension contributions $84,940,000,000
Other $64,970,000,000
Employee fringe benefits $6,690,000,000
Scholarships $2,130,000,000
Property taxes $15,710,000,000
Employer-provided transportation $3,850,000,000
Retirement accounts $24,630,000,000
Cafeteria plans $26,760,000,000
State and local bonds $19,560,000,000
Company daycare $3,140,000,000
College and university tax credits $12,060,000,000
Mortgage interest $92,040,000,000
Medicare Benefits $55,850,000,000
Child care $55,850,000,000
Employer health plans $107,140,000,000
Making Work Pay (ending) $60,510,000,000
First-time homebuyer credit $8,820,000,000
Veterans' benefits $5,570,000,000
Life insurance benefits $25,750,000,000
Capital gains death exclusion $25,750,000,000
Social security and railroad retirement $27,170,000,000
Home sale capital gains $15,200,000,000

Federal spending

Item Value
Annual Deficit $1,394,530,000,000
Additional receipts $83,230,000,000
Taxes raised $2,192,180,000,000

Disasters

Disaster Estimated Total Damage Notes
Japan 2011 Earthquake $235,000,000,000 reconstruction and recovery cost, World Bank estimate
Hurricane Katrina $107,440,000,000
1988 US Drought $78,060,000,000
1980 US Drought $60,740,000,000
Hurricane Andrew $46,180,000,000
9/11 insured losses $40,000,000,000 For hurricanes, the rule of thumb is that total losses are roughly double insured losses. It is unclear if a similar rule exist for terrorism.
Hurricane Ike $28,170,000,000
Hurricane Irene $8,000,000,000 (estimated)

Hypothetical disasters

Estimated total losses if the disaster happened today (based on insurance industry modeling)

Disaster Estimated Total Losses Notes
1938 Long Island Express $236,960,000,000 if it had curved left and made landfall in New Jersey instead of Long Island
1812 New Madrid, Missouri earthquake $206,050,000,000
1926 Miami hurricane $202,000,000,000
1909 San Francisco earthquake $197,810,000,000
1907 Galveston hurricane $82,420,000,000
Long Island Express $78,060,000,000 (1938 New England Hurricane)
Charleston SC, quake of 1886 $76,240,000,000
1989 Loma Prieta earthquake $12,360,000,000

Cost of electricity

(Price of electricity to power all US homes for a year, by plant type)

Plant Type Cost Notes
Advance combined cycle natural gas 78,100,000,000
Conventional Coal (without societal costs) 117,340,000,000
External societal costs from use of that amount of coal power $226,690,000,000 Harvard Medical School analysis. Range of possible values was $119b to $342b. Most of the uncertainty was due to potentially lower costs from air pollution or higher ones from climate change.
Public Health Burden in Appalacia [sic] $55,400,000,000
Air pollution from power plants $118,300,000,000
Climate Impact $40,030,000,000
Advanced coal with carbon capture $168,590,000,000
Biomass $139,250,000,000 Estimates of climate impact vary wildly Consensus seems to be more than nothing but less than coal.
Geothermal $125,880,000,000
Hydroelectric $106,940,000,000
Wind $120,070,000,000
Offshore wind $301,030,000,000
Solar (photovoltaic) $260,800,000,000
Solar (thermal) $385,940,000,000
Advanced nuclear $140,980,000,000 Little impact on climate/air, but hard to find assessments of meltdown and fuel storage costs/risks. Some past costs shown for perspective.

Nuclear accidents

Accident Cost Notes
Fukushima meltdown estimated total cost to Japan $131,100,000,000 Compare to $128,590,000,000 for deaths from quake/tsunami
Fukushima cost from 300 extra cancer deaths (EPA conversion) $2,579,000,000
Belarus estimated 30-year costs from Chernobyl $282,350,000,000
Cost of estimated 42,457 Chernobyl deaths (EPA method) $344,750,000,000

BP oil spill claims fund

Item Value
BP oil spill claims fund $20,270,000,000
Total 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami aid from all countries $15,840,000,000
Worldwide aid to Somalia since 1991 $55,000,000,000
G8/IMF loan pledge to Arab Spring $73,000,000,000
Japan's contribution to TEPCO victim fund $62,000,000,000
Cost to fund wikipedia at current levels for 100 years $1,850,000,000
Cost to provide free yearly tax prep to every US household $8,450,000,000
Cost to give every US 18 year-old a free degree at a community college $46,340,000,000
Additional cost to fund all US schools at magnet school levels $46,340,000,000
Annual cost to send every US child to a university for free $127,610,000,000
Cost to buy the Amazon rainforest $130,000,000,000
UBS loss from one rogue trader $2,300,000,000
DoE loan to CA Valley Solar Ranch Project $1,200,000,000
Apple's cash on hand $76,200,000,000

New York CIty

Area Combined Property Value
New York City $806,490,000,000
Manhattan $281,040,000,000
Queens $208,180,000,000
Brooklyn $201,230,000,000
Staten Island $61,230,000,000
Bronx $54,660,000,000

Megaprojects

Project Cost Notes
National missile defense shield cost through 2013 $107,690,000,000
F-22 Raptor program $67,610,000,000 halted
Planned Russian Bering Strait tunnel $66,000,000,000
Obama's 2011 high-speed rail proposal $53,000,000,000
Cost to build SF-to-LA high-speed rail $45,000,000,000
UK Crossrail $26,490,000,000
King Abdullah Economic City $50,020,000,000 High-speed rail $9,120,000,000
Hong Kong International airport $27,120,000,000
Manhattan Project $24,400,000,000
2nd Avenue NYC subway line $17,960,000,000
Big Dig cost $18,510,000,000 as of 2008
Failed Army intelligence-sharing computer system $2,700,000,000
Bay Bridge span replacement $6,300,000,000
Downtown Dubai project $20,270,000,000 Burj Khalifa $1,520,000,000
Channel Tunnel $22,960,000,000
Nimitz-class carrier $4,930,000,000
Gerald R. Ford-class carrier $9,000,000,000
Amtrak 30-year plan for northeast corridor $192,000,000,000 Randall made a mistake here the value represented by the blocks is $117,000,000,000
City Qatar is building to host the 2022 World Cup $207,000,000,000
Apollo moon landing project $192,000,000,000
International Space Station $138,000,000,000
Space Shuttle program $194,620,000,000
US interstate highway system $465,970,000,000 The largest single public-works project in the history of mankind

Federal budget

Budget options

Estimates by the Congressional Budget Office of the effect of various hypothetical policy decisions on annual tax revenue, averaged over the next ten years.

Category Item Price
Cost of existing tax cuts (Loss in annual revenue if tax cuts are made permanent)
2001 (Bush) tax cuts $158,240,000,000
2003 (Bush) capital gains tax cuts $27,190,000,000
2010 (Obama) payroll tax cut $111,700,000,000
Potential new taxes (Increase in annual tax revenue if implimented)
Raise corporate taxes by one percentage point $10,060,000,000
Legalize marijuana and tax it at levels similar to tobacco $7,020,000,000
Institute tax on CO2 emissions $10,060,000,000 (This appears to be a mistake by Randall and should read $113,000,000,000)

Stimulus spending

Item Value
2008 Total $205,930,000,000
Individual tax breaks $120,110,000,000
Student loan guarantees $33,470,000,000
Business tax breaks $52,360,000,000
2009 Total $747,950,000,000
Tax breaks $307,530,000,000
Education $90,460,000,000
Medicare/Medicaid $80,500,000,000
Transportation $32,560,000,000
Unemployment $62,740,000,000
Infrastructure $24,000,000,000
Other spending $150,160,000,000

Bailouts

Item Value Notes
1980s-1990 S&L bailout $78,300,000,000 total cost to taxpayers
Cost to FDIC of bank failures $19,000,000,000 resulting from the 2008 financial crisis
TARP bailout funds distributed $392,980,000,000 Out of $700,000,000,000 available
Estimated TARP taxpayer losses $41,660,000,000
Value of outstanding TARP assets $144,440,000 Randall made a mistake here the chart should read $144,440,000,000
Bailout funds returned $206,880,000,000
Current Eurozone bailout fund $1,361,700,000,000

Federal Payments

Item Cost
Annual improper federal payments comprising fraud, abuse, and poorly-documented payments $125,400,000,000
Federal payments to dead retirees $120,200,000
NEA-estimated cost to bring all US schools into good repair $413,300,000,000,000
Annual economic cost of unmaintained infrastructure $129,000,000,000
Estimated direct annual agricultural value of bees $220,000,000,000

Military/Security Spending

Item Cost
Wasted money in Afghanistan/Iraq war contracts $60,000,000,000
Reconstruction money reportedly missing $18,000,000,000
Total US spending since 2001 to secure borders $90,000,000,000
US nuclear arms spending during the Cold War $2,818,300,000,000
Ballistic missile submarines $451,360,000,000
Ballistic missiles to put on those submarines $136,690,000,000
The $87 billion which John Kerry voted for/against $101,800,000,000
"Star Wars" missile defence system (1987 Heritage Foundation estimate) $185,300,000,000

US Spending on Wars

Including only direct spending on war operations, and not resulting veterans' benefits or interest on debt incurred.

War Cost
World War I $334,000,000,000
Spanish-American War $9,030,000,000
Civil War $79,740,000,000
American revolution $2,410,000,000
1812 $1,550,000,000
Mexican War $2,380,000,000
World War II $4,104,000,000,000
Korean War $341,000,000,000
Vietnam War $738,000,000,000
Persian Gulf War $102,000,000,000
Iraq War $784,000,000,000
War in Afghanistan $321,000,000,000

Trillions

Category Item Price
Size of derivatives markets by year
1988 $3,090,000,000,000
1995 $26,690,000,000,000
2001 $86,390,000,000,000
2005 $227,260,000,000,000
2009 $439,000,000,000,000
Size of credit default swap market by year (included in derivatives)
2001 $1,150,000,000,000
2005 $19,350,000,000,000
2007 $66,280,000,000,000
2009 $31,350,000,000,000
US household net worth
US household $58,740,000,000,000
Poorer half $1,470,000,000,000
Richer half $57,270,000,000,000
Richest 1% $19,620,000,000,000
Total debt in the US
Total debt in the US $36,560,000,000,000
State and local government $2,500,000,000,000
Household $13,560,000,000,000
Federal government $9,510,000,000,000
Business $10,980,000,000,000
World GDP
World $62,900,000,000,000
North America $17,850,000,000,000
United States $14,530,000,000,000
South America $3,070,000,000,000
EU $16,240,000,000,000
Europe (incl. Russia and Turkey) $20,130,000,000,000
Africa $1,610,000,000,000
Asia $17,530,000,000,000
Oceania $1,310,000,000,000
Total public debt (Note: US figures are from 2011, while the other totals use 2010 debt in 2011 dollars, which is likely an underestimate.)
EU (total) $13,340,000,000,000
United States $10,200,000,000,000 (Plus internal government borrowing of 4,740,000,000,000)
Japan $8,630,000,000,000
Germany $2,480,000,000,000
Italy $2,140,000,000,000
India $2,140,000,000,000
China $1,907,000,000,000
France $1,767,000,000,000
United Kingdom $1,654,000,000,000
Brazil $1,281,000,000,000
Canada $1,130,000,000,000
Spain $834,210,000,000
Mexico $584,860,000,000
Greece $460,180,000,000
World total proven Energy reserves
Oil $131,960,000,000,000 (November 2011 prices)
Coal $72,850,000,000,000 (2011 central Appalachian prices)
Natural gas $21,470,000,000,000 (2011 NYMEX prices)
US Energy Reserves
Oil $20,580,000,000,000
Coal $20,020,000,000,000
Natural gas $930,470,000,000
Value of 10 years of electricity generated if the surface of Texas was converted to:
Solar power plants $89,240,000,000,000
Wind turbines $7,950,000,000,000
All US real estate
All $28,380,000,000,000
Home $23,010,000,000,000
Commercial (includes stores, apartments, industrial, etc.) $5,370,000,000,000
Total ____ so far
Value of all gold ever mined (late 2011 prices) $9,120,000,000,000
World Total Liquid Assets $77,000,000,000,000
Estimated total economic production of the human race (so far, roughly three-fifths of it since 1980) $2,396,950,000,000,000


GDP by year

Year GDP (total economic activity) the world (minus US) GDP (total economic productivity) of the US (minus government) US federal government
1920
1930
1940
1942 $500,000,000,000
1943 $1,000,000,000,000
1944 $1,000,000,000,000
1945 $1,000,000,000,000
1946 $500,000,000,000
1947 $2,000,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1948 $2,000,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1949 $2,000,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1950 $2,500,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1951 $2,500,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1952 $2,500,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1953 $2,500,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1954 $2,500,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1955 $3,000,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1956 $3,000,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1957 $3,000,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1958 $3,000,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1959 $3,500,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1960 $3,500,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1961 $3,500,000,000,000 $500,000,000,000
1962 $3,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1963 $4,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1964 $4,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1965 $4,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1966 $4,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1967 $5,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1968 $5,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1969 $5,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1970 $5,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1971 $5,500,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1972 $6,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1973 $6,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1974 $6,000,000,000,000 $1,000,000,000,000
1975 $5,500,000,000,000 $1,500,000,000,000
1976 $6,000,000,000,000 $1,500,000,000,000
1977 $6,000,000,000,000 $1,500,000,000,000
1978 $6,500,000,000,000 $1,500,000,000,000
1979 $7,000,000,000,000 $1,500,000,000,000
1980 $19,000,000,000,000 $6,500,000,000,000 $1,500,000,000,000
1981 $19,000,000,000,000 $6,500,000,000,000 $1,500,000,000,000
1982 $19,000,000,000,000 $6,000,000,000,000 $1,500,000,000,000
1983 $20,000,000,000,000 $6,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1984 $20,000,000,000,000 $7,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1985 $22,000,000,000,000 $7,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1986 $23,000,000,000,000 $7,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1987 $23,500,000,000,000 $7,500,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1988 $25,000,000,000,000 $8,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1989 $26,000,000,000,000 $8,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1990 $27,000,000,000,000 $8,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1991 $27,000,000,000,000 $8,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1992 $31,000,000,000,000 $8,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1993 $32,500,000,000,000 $8,500,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1994 $33,000,000,000,000 $9,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1995 $34,000,000,000,000 $9,000,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1996 $34,500,000,000,000 $9,500,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1997 $36,500,000,000,000 $9,500,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1998 $36,500,000,000,000 $10,500,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000,000
1999 $37,000,000,000,000 $10,500,000,000,000 $2,500,000,000,000
2000 $39,000,000,000,000 $10,500,000,000,000 $2,500,000,000,000
2001 $39,000,000,000,000 $10,500,000,000,000 $2,500,000,000,000
2002 $41,000,000,000,000 $10,500,000,000,000 $2,500,000,000,000
2003 $42,500,000,000,000 $11,000,000,000,000 $2,500,000,000,000
2004 $45,000,000,000,000 $11,500,000,000,000 $2,500,000,000,000
2005 $46,500,000,000,000 $11,500,000,000,000 $3,000,000,000,000
2006 $50,000,000,000,000 $12,000,000,000,000 $3,000,000,000,000
2007 $53,000,000,000,000 $12,000,000,000,000 $3,000,000,000,000
2008 $57,500,000,000,000 $11,500,000,000,000 $3,000,000,000,000
2009 $56,500,000,000,000 $11,000,000,000,000 $3,500,000,000,000
2010 $61,000,000,000,000 $11,500,000,000,000 $3,500,000,000,000
2011 $64,500,000,000,000 $11,500,000,000,000 $4,000,000,000,000