Inflation

Inflation is the gradual increase in prices of goods and services over time.

As inflation rises, the purchasing power of money decreases, meaning the same amount of money buys fewer things.

Why inflation is important

Inflation affects:

  • Prices of products and services
  • Savings and investments
  • Wages and salaries
  • The overall economy

It is one of the most important concepts in finance and economics.

How inflation works

When demand for goods increases or production costs rise, businesses may increase prices.

As prices rise across the economy:

  • Food becomes more expensive
  • Housing costs increase
  • Transportation prices rise

This reduces the value of money over time.

Causes of inflation

Demand-pull inflation

Prices rise because demand is higher than supply.

 

Cost-push inflation

Prices rise because production becomes more expensive.

Example:

  • Higher fuel prices
  • Increased material costs

Monetary inflation

Inflation can also occur when too much money circulates in the economy.

Effects of inflation

Positive effects

  • Encourages spending and investment
  • Supports economic growth in moderate amounts

Negative effects

  • Reduces purchasing power
  • Increases living costs
  • Can weaken savings

High inflation can damage the economy.

Inflation vs Deflation

  • Inflation → prices rise
  • Deflation → prices fall

Both affect economic activity differently.

How inflation is measured

Governments and economists often use the:

  • Consumer Price Index (CPI)
  • Producer Price Index (PPI)

These track changes in prices over time.

Why learning inflation matters

Understanding inflation helps you:

  • Manage personal finances
  • Understand economic news
  • Make smarter financial decisions
  • Protect savings and investments

Inflation affects almost everyone.

A simple example

If a coffee costs €2 today and €2.20 next year, that price increase is inflation.

Related terms

Source

Information simplified from the Wikipedia article “Inflation”.

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