RealWorth
🇨🇦Canada · 2001

What was CAD$75 worth in 2001?

Canada Inflation & Purchasing Power Calculator

2001
CAD$75.00
×1.36+36% inflation
2026
CAD$102.00

In 2001, CAD$75 represented approximately 0.1 weeks of average wages — a modest expense.

Historical Context · The Financial Crisis Decade

Housing Bubble, Debt Explosion, and the Great Recession

The 2000s began with the dot-com bust and ended with the worst financial crisis since 1929. In between, easy credit and a housing bubble created an illusion of widespread prosperity. Consumer purchasing power was artificially inflated by debt rather than real wage growth. When the 2008 financial crisis hit, the true fragility was exposed — home equity evaporated overnight and unemployment surged to 10%. The Federal Reserve responded by cutting rates to near zero and beginning quantitative easing, setting the stage for a decade of ultra-low inflation but also asset price inflation that benefited the wealthy disproportionately.

💡 Did you know?

US household debt rose from 65% of GDP in 2000 to 98% of GDP in 2007 — meaning that for every dollar Americans earned, they owed nearly a dollar in debt.

CAD$75 as a modest sum

CAD$75 in 2001 was a real amount of money, but not a fortune. A working family could plan around it. This kind of sum might cover a month's essentials for a single person, or a week of household supplies for a larger family. It sat in the range where ordinary people made ordinary decisions — save it, or spend it on something useful.

What CAD$75 could buy in 2001 vs today

In 2001 · CAD$75.00
🍞Loaf of bread(CAD$2.1)
35×
🥛Milk (gallon)(CAD$3)
25×
Gasoline (gal)(CAD$1.8)
41×
In 2026 · CAD$102.00
🍞Loaf of bread(CAD$4.2)
24×
🥛Milk (gallon)(CAD$5.5)
18×
Gasoline (gal)(CAD$3.5)
29×

Life in Canada in 2001

The average annual wage in Canada in 2001 was approximately CAD$33,600. This means CAD$75 represented roughly 0.1 weeks of average earnings — a modest expense. A loaf of bread cost approximately CAD$2.1 and monthly rent averaged around CAD$700.

How CAD$75 Lost Its Value Over Time

Frequently Asked Questions

What is CAD$75 from 2001 worth in 2026?+

CAD$75 in 2001 is equivalent to approximately CAD$102 in 2026. This represents a 36% increase due to cumulative inflation in Canada between 2001 and 2026.

How much has the CAD$ lost in value since 2001?+

Since 2001, the Canada currency has lost approximately 27% of its purchasing power. In other words, what cost CAD$75 in 2001 would cost CAD$102 today — you need 1.4× more money to buy the same goods.

What was the average salary in Canada in 2001?+

Based on historical wage data, CAD$75 in 2001 represented approximately 0.1 weeks of average wages in Canada. This helps illustrate not just the nominal price change, but what money actually meant in human terms — how long people had to work to earn it.

How accurate is this inflation calculation for 2001?+

This calculation uses official Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for Canada. For years before 1913 (USA) or equivalent periods for other countries, the calculation uses reconstructed price indices from academic sources including MeasuringWorth.com and the Bank of England's Millennium Dataset. Pre-industrial calculations carry a wider margin of uncertainty.

Why does purchasing power matter more than just inflation percentage?+

A simple inflation percentage tells you how prices changed, but purchasing power shows you what money could actually buy in human terms. CAD$75 in 2001 bought a specific number of loaves of bread, weeks of rent, or months of wages — context that makes the number real and tangible, not just an abstract percentage.

Related Calculations

Flip the question

Want to flip the question? Instead of asking what CAD$75 was worth in 2001, ask what your modern salary would have made you in that era. Our Rich-O-Meter takes any annual salary and shows where it would have ranked — working class, middle class, or wealthy elite — at any point in Canada's recorded history.

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See where you're rich today

Beyond history, there's geography. Our WealthMap compares your current salary to median income in around 90 countries today. A middle-class income in one country is wealthy-elite in another — and the gap between these places is often wider than the gap between eras.

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These calculations are estimates based on Canada's CPI data from Statistics Canada CPI series; Bank of Canada historical data; Dominion Bureau of Statistics (pre-1971). See our Methodology and Data Sources for full details. Not financial advice.