Finance Basics

What Is Inflation and How Does It Affect Your Money?

Your salary went up 3% last year. So why does everything feel more expensive? Inflation is the invisible tax on your purchasing power — and understanding it is the first step to making sure your money keeps up.

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ClearCalc Editorial

May 6, 2026

·8 min read

In 2015, the average price of a dozen eggs in the US was around $2.75. By 2023, that same dozen cost over $4.80 — a 75% increase in eight years. The eggs didn't get better. The chickens didn't change. What changed was the value of the dollar relative to the things it can buy. That's inflation in its most tangible form: money gradually losing its purchasing power over time.

Inflation isn't just a news item or a political talking point. It directly affects how much your savings are worth, whether your salary raise was actually a raise, and how much you'll need to retire comfortably. Understanding it — properly, not just vaguely — changes how you make financial decisions.

What Inflation Actually Is

Inflation is a sustained increase in the general price level of goods and services over time. When inflation is running at 3% per year, something that costs $100 today will cost $103 next year. The product hasn't changed — but you need more dollars to buy it, which means each individual dollar is worth slightly less.

The official measure in the US is the Consumer Price Index (CPI) — a basket of commonly purchased goods and services including food, housing, transport, healthcare, and clothing. When the CPI rises, inflation is rising. Central banks like the Federal Reserve monitor this closely and target around 2% annual inflation as the healthy "cruise speed" for an economy.

2%

Fed's inflation target

$163

What $100 (2010) costs now

40yr

For $100 to halve at 2% inflation

Why Does Inflation Happen?

There are three main drivers, and they often overlap:

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Some inflation is normal and healthy — it encourages spending and investment rather than hoarding cash. The problem is when inflation runs too hot (above 4–5%) for extended periods, or when wages don't keep up. Deflation — prices falling — sounds nice but is actually more economically dangerous, because it encourages people to delay purchases ("it'll be cheaper tomorrow"), which slows the entire economy.

How Inflation Erodes Your Money Over Time

This is where it gets personal. If your money is sitting in a savings account earning 1% interest while inflation is running at 3%, you're losing 2% of purchasing power every year. The number in your account goes up, but what it can actually buy goes down. This is called a negative real return.

ScenarioAfter 10 YearsAfter 20 YearsAfter 30 Years
$10,000 under mattress (0%)$7,441 real value$5,537 real value$4,120 real value
$10,000 at 1% savings (below inflation)$8,203 real value$6,730 real value$5,521 real value
$10,000 at 3% (matches inflation)$10,000 real value$10,000 real value$10,000 real value
$10,000 at 7% index fund (beats inflation)$16,289 real value$26,533 real value$43,219 real value

Assumes 3% inflation. The mattress scenario shows that cash stored without any return loses over half its purchasing power in 30 years. Money needs to grow faster than inflation to maintain its real value.

Inflation and Your Salary: Are You Actually Getting a Raise?

This is the question most people never ask. A 3% pay rise sounds positive. But if inflation is running at 4%, your real salary just declined by 1%. You have more dollars, but they buy less. Your nominal wage (the number) went up. Your real wage (the purchasing power) went down.

The formula is simple: Real raise = Nominal raise − Inflation rate. Any year where your pay increase doesn't outpace inflation is functionally a pay cut, regardless of what HR calls it.

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Fixed incomes and inflation: Retirees on fixed pensions or annuities are particularly vulnerable. If your retirement income is fixed at $3,000/month and inflation averages 3% annually, your real income loses a third of its purchasing power in just 14 years. This is why building inflation-beating investments into retirement planning isn't optional — it's essential.

How to Protect Your Money from Inflation

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See how inflation affects your savings over time

Our free savings calculator lets you model growth at different interest rates — try entering a rate below inflation to see your purchasing power erode, then a rate above it to see what genuine wealth building looks like.

Open Savings Calculator arrow_forward

Good Inflation vs Bad Inflation

Not all inflation affects people equally. There's an important distinction between asset inflation (rising prices of homes, stocks, investments) and consumer inflation (rising prices of goods and services). Asset inflation benefits those who own assets — homeowners and investors see their net worth rise. Consumer inflation hurts everyone, but hits lower-income households hardest because they spend a larger proportion of income on necessities like food, rent, and energy.

This is why inflation is politically charged. During periods of high consumer inflation, people on fixed or slowly-rising wages feel squeezed even if headline economic numbers look fine. Their nominal income stayed stable while the cost of every essential rose around them.

The best personal defence against both is the same: own assets, minimise cash drag, ensure income grows at least as fast as inflation, and build savings in vehicles that earn a real return. These aren't exotic strategies — they're the practical application of understanding what inflation actually does to money over time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Zero inflation sounds ideal but is problematic in practice. When prices are expected to stay flat or fall, consumers delay purchases — why buy a fridge today if it'll be cheaper next year? This delays spending, slows production, raises unemployment. Central banks target 2% because it keeps spending behaviour normal, gives them room to cut interest rates during recessions (hard to do when you're already at zero), and provides a small buffer against accidental deflation. It's a feature, not a bug — carefully managed moderate inflation is a stabilising force in an economy.

Yes — and it's one of the hidden advantages of fixed-rate mortgage debt. If you have a fixed mortgage at $2,000/month, inflation effectively makes that payment cheaper over time in real terms. In 10 years, $2,000 will represent a smaller share of a higher nominal income. Meanwhile, your property value (a real asset) tends to rise with inflation. This is why periods of moderate inflation are typically good for homeowners with fixed debt — the debt shrinks in real value while the asset appreciates.

The Fed's primary inflation-fighting tool is raising interest rates. Higher rates make borrowing more expensive — mortgages, car loans, and business loans all become costlier, which slows spending and investment. Less spending means less demand pressure on prices. It also makes saving more attractive, pulling money out of circulation. The tradeoff is that high rates slow economic growth and can trigger recessions if held too long or raised too sharply. The 2022–2023 rate hiking cycle was the most aggressive since the 1980s and successfully brought inflation down from 9%+ to near target levels.

Because CPI is an average across a standardised basket of goods for a composite household — and your spending pattern almost certainly differs from that average. If you rent in a high-cost city, your housing inflation may be running at 8% even while CPI shows 3%. If you don't own a car, you skip the transport component entirely. Younger people tend to experience higher personal inflation because housing, food, and services form a larger share of their budget — all categories that historically inflate faster than electronics and clothing (which are falling in price).

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