Holy crap..... let's have a little clarification here.
First of all, you can't compare speaker wattage and CRT wattage.... that's tottally apples and oranges.
First of all, if you have a 450 watt power supply, that's at 12 volts, not at 110. Easiest way is to look at your power supply, and see how many AMPS it takes. That will be a MAXIMUM before it pops the fuse.
So.... assuming that your power supply says it takes 2 amps.... take amps times the voltage, and you have 240 watts. This is the MAXIMUM... you'll never hit that. According to some sites I've read, a computer and CRT running uses about 150 watts.
Your monitor runs at 120 volts; that wattage on the tag on the back should be right.
Your speakers, however, are a TOTALLY different thing. If you have 200 watt speakers, you're talking about SOUND, not POWER. Plus, if you've got one of those 200 watt computer speaker systems, and it's running on some sort of wall wart, then you're being slightly misled. They're talking about a theoretical PEAK power, not RMS. RMS means sustained output power. Peak is one time (like a kick drum). Computer speakers also pretty much only use power when they're being used... otherwise the light trickle of power for them to be sitting there with no signal is negligable.
The bottom line is, it costs about as much to leave your computer on as to leave a 150 watt light bulb on.
And this is reduced if your monitor is "Green", meaning it goes into standby mode.
Just my $0.02
"In order to start solving a problem, one must first identify its owner." --Me
--Greg