With some things? Almost certainly. How much more expensive, for example, is a gallon of milk? I don't know. How much more expensive is it to drive a mile in a car? I don't know.
Food and energy (along with housing costs) are the three staples that are pretty easy to compare over time, and I simply don't know how those things are now as opposed to 200, 100, and 20 years ago. From a technological perspective (consumer electronics, health care, etc.) it's no contest: there are things that exist now that simply didn't then.
I do find it pretty amazing that someone can work a half of an hour at a minimum wage job and be able to afford a couple of items off of the value menu at Wendy's. It's far from the healthiest option ever, but rather amazing in a historical context.
Ed O.