What was "the Ceiling" from WWII Era.

I’ve been listening to some old time radio shows and was wondering what this was.

(From Burns and Allen)

The joke went like this:

Gracie Allen) What would you like to buy?

Man) I don’t know, what with rationing, the $25,000 ceiling and the fact I haven’t worked since 1929…

OK, the joke was the guy hadn’t worked, and I get WWII rationing, but what is the ceiling?

I am guessing it’s a limit on the amount you can buy? But I was wondering if anyone had any firm information.

Thanks.

FDR’s “supertax”?

Full article here:

What was the average and median income in the US back in the day? I think most people probably supported it because it wasn’t going to impact them or anyone they knew.

Well that was quick, and thank you. I wonder if this ties into the fact stars like Jack Benny chose to purchase their shows and take low salaries and got their income from owning the shows.

This page from the September 30, 1942 Chicago Tribune has a graphic of the U.S. showing the “median male wage” by state. The U.S. average is given as $1,002. Three states (California, Nevada, and Michigan) are over $1,200, and several of the southern states are under $600.

The mean annual wage was $1,500. It’s hard to find household income numbers because the feds only seem to publish them from 1967 and later.

$25,000 is about $360,000 in today’s money (that LA Times article is from 1992.) $1,500 is a little under $22,000 today; national average wages today are about $45,000.