Staring at PP 2d Ed, p.105, for "young males who weigh 150-200 lbs", AFTER setting baseline weights through the "get to a weight where form is good and bar speed slows down just a little" (which PP notes may not happen on the first workout, as form may need to be worked on), deadlifts can likely go up 15lbs/workout, and squats 10 lb "for perhaps 3 weeks before slowing down to half that rate". For bench, cleans and press, it's "5 to 10 lbs per workout for the first few, slowing to 2.5-5 per workout after only 2-3 weeks".
Not surprisingly, and as Randy has noted, SS 3rd edition echoes this advice (generally on pp. 304-305), with notes that older trainess, women and kids will need to make smaller jumps (on squat "5 pound jumps are sufficient to start with, and then smaller jumps will be required", on Bench and Press it's 5 lb max with smaller jumps being a fact of life quickly. On deadlift it's more like 10 to start and then 5 for quite awhile.
That said, these are obviously general rules and one should listen to one's body, but I think Rip would approve of a maxim of "work hard, but don't get greedy". My personal experience includes making some pretty large jumps early in my training and probably overrunning my body's ability to cope with it; looking back a more measured approach may have been preferable. Rip repeatedly says that it's better to stay "unstuck" (keep progressing) than to get stuck and have to undo that.
I'd note that PP talks in terms of someone being properly coached on the lifts (which makes sense, as PP, although used by many of us lifters, is a "programming" book, [yeah, I know, hence the title, fine, be sarcastic] and thus aimed at more at coaches), so the vast majority of us who are NOT receiving highly skilled coaching every session should also take into account that our form may kinda suck and that may inhibit our increases.
THBS, I'm a rank novice whose only experience has been trying to train myself, so I gladly defer to just about everyone else.