PhilThib wrote:IIRC [color="Red"]7.2 Million Dollars[/color], a very cheap bargain even by the time's standard
for whom an d compared to what... healthy economy vs. burdened economy, as nowadays
Britons spent only roughly [color="Red"]75 million Pound Sterling[/color] for the whole Crimean campaign
however, alone in in 1851 they exported goods in a total value of over [color="Red"]£3,548,595[/color] (See: Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, The Russian Menace to Europe") to the Ottoman Dominions
the Russians had the main burden of the war, financial as well as military losses and civil losses.
they had to wait 8 years before the purchase was settled and were in dare need of money.
i dont have the rates of inflation for them, but to be compared with strong vs weak economies:
the US government spent [color="Red"]2,5 million for the ACW each day[/color] in midwar!
federal $2.59 paper money equaled $1 in gold
the confederates had a rate of $60-$70 equaled for each gold dollar
now compare it to $4.74/km2 for the purchase and remember the jump in purchase power parity, i dont know yet for the US when the treaties were signed,nor for the Russians between End of the Crimean War and getting the payment for Alaska
IF RUSSIA NEEDED THE MONEY (TO AVOID further INFLATION), the they had no choice and apparently were happy about the price

...not paid by AGEOD.
however, prone to throw them into disarray.
PS:
‘Everything is very simple in War, but the simplest thing is difficult. These difficulties accumulate and produce a friction which no man can imagine exactly who has not seen War . . . in War, through the influence of an infinity of petty circumstances, which cannot properly be described on paper, things disappoint us, and we fall short of the mark.‘
Clausewitz