Markets in Everything: $1 Million Taxi Medallions
New York Times -- "Two New York taxi medallions — aluminum plates that grant the right to operate a yellow cab — changed hands this week for $1 million apiece, the highest recorded sale since the city’s modern livery system began (see chart). The sale was the culmination of decades of astonishing growth for the humble medallion, which is nailed to the hood of every yellow cab in the city. When New York issued its first batch of medallions in 1937, the going price was $10 even, or $157.50 in today’s dollars.
Some perspective: The Dow Jones industrial average has risen 1,100 percent in the last 30 years. In the same period, the value of a taxi medallion is up 1,900 percent. That return beats gold, oil and the American house.
There are 13,237 medallions in the city; new ones, when issued, are sold at auction. But the medallion pool is rarely expanded, creating a scarcity that helps keep values high. (Many owners have objected to a city proposal that would allow livery cabs to pick up street hails outside busy parts of Manhattan, saying such a plan would lower the value of their medallions.)"
HT: Colin Grabow
5 Comments:
NYC cabs do a lot of business in the city financial district. So, is it not ironic that since 2000 cab medallions are up 500%, but the Dow is up only 0.065%, during the same period?
MJ .. is there a reference that compares value of old $$ to new $$? Like 1940 to now ... 1950 to now, etc.?
The BLS has a "Inflation Calcuator" website that goes back to 1913 and allows you to compare dollar amounts in two different years.
http://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm
Another example that from South Carolina to Montana to NYC, the worst abusers of commercial freedoms are state and local governments.
Ddi you know that in CA, if you have a nudie bar you are not allowed to serve alcoholic beverages? The state has determined that you cannot drink a beer and watch a naked person dance at the same time.
This means that medallion owners are clear examples of rentiers.
Adam Smith would recommend that medallions be taxed accordingly.
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