Inflation: The Rising Cost of Living Explained

Inflation: The Rising Cost of Living Explained

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Inflation: The Rising Cost of Living Explained

A coffee that cost $2 a decade ago now costs $5. A grocery run that used to come to $100 now hits $140. Your salary looks the same on paper — but somehow, it buys less every year.

That is inflation. And it affects every single person on the planet.

Understanding how inflation works is one of the most useful things you can learn about money.

Inflation is the rate at which the general price level of goods and services rises over time, reducing the purchasing power of money.

Introduction

Inflation is one of the most talked-about forces in economics — and one of the least understood by everyday people. When prices rise, your money buys less. A dollar, a pound, or a euro today is worth less than it was five years ago. That steady erosion is what determines oil prices, interest rates, wages, and the cost of your morning coffee.

Inflation touches every corner of your financial life. It affects how much you pay for rent, groceries, petrol, and healthcare. It influences the interest rate on your mortgage and the return on your savings. Central banks like the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank make trillion-dollar decisions every year specifically to manage inflation.

The stakes are enormous. When inflation runs too high — as it did globally in 2021–2023 — it wipes out savings, destabilises governments, and pushes millions of families into financial hardship. When it runs too low, it can signal a stagnant economy and rising unemployment.

In this article, you will learn what inflation is, why it happens, how it is measured, which categories are hit hardest, and — most importantly — what it means for your money right now.

Key Takeaways

  • Inflation means prices are rising across the economy, so each unit of money buys less than it used to.

  • The most common measure of inflation is the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which tracks a "basket" of everyday goods and services.

  • Inflation is driven by three main forces: too much demand, rising production costs, and increases in the money supply.

  • The 2021–2023 global inflation surge was the worst in 40 years, with the U.S. CPI peaking at 9.1% in June 2022.

  • Central banks fight inflation by raising interest rates, which makes borrowing more expensive and slows spending.

  • Not all inflation is bad — a low, steady rate of around 2% is considered healthy for a growing economy.

Contents

  1. What Is Inflation?

  2. How Is Inflation Measured?

  3. What Causes Inflation?

  4. Global Inflation Trends: The Data

  5. Which Categories Are Hit Hardest?

  6. How Inflation Affects Your Money

  7. How Central Banks Fight Inflation

  8. Frequently Asked Questions

  9. Conclusion

  10. Sources

What Is Inflation?

Inflation is the gradual increase in the price of goods and services across an economy over time. It is not one item getting more expensive — it is the broad, sustained rise in prices everywhere.

Think of it this way. In 1990, you could fill a shopping basket with bread, milk, eggs, vegetables, and a few household items for about $20. Today, that same basket costs closer to $60 in many parts of the world. The items are largely the same. But the price is three times higher. Your money has lost two-thirds of its purchasing power in 35 years.

Purchasing Power: The Real Impact

Purchasing power is the number of goods or services you can buy with a fixed amount of money. When inflation rises, purchasing power falls. If inflation runs at 5% per year, then $100 today will only buy what $95 buys now — twelve months from now.

This might sound small. But over a decade of 5% annual inflation, $100 loses nearly 40% of its value. Over 20 years, it loses more than 60%. This is why inflation is often described as a "hidden tax" — it silently erodes your wealth even when your bank balance stays the same.

Deflation: The Other Extreme

The opposite of inflation is deflation — falling prices. While cheaper goods sound attractive, sustained deflation is actually dangerous. When people expect prices to fall further, they delay purchases. Businesses earn less revenue, cut jobs, and reduce investment. This creates a deflationary spiral that can devastate an economy, as Japan experienced throughout the 1990s.

This is why most central banks target a low, positive inflation rate — typically around 2% per year — as the sweet spot for a healthy economy.

💡 Quick Fact: The U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank both officially target an inflation rate of approximately 2% per year as their long-run goal.

How Is Inflation Measured?

Governments and central banks measure inflation using price indices — statistical tools that track how much a representative set of goods and services costs over time.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI)

The most widely used measure is the Consumer Price Index, or CPI. It tracks the average change in prices paid by consumers for a fixed "basket" of goods and services. This basket includes categories like food, housing, transport, healthcare, clothing, and entertainment.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) updates its CPI data monthly, tracking the prices of approximately 80,000 items across hundreds of categories. When the CPI rises 4% in a year, it means the average consumer is paying 4% more for that basket of goods than they were 12 months ago.

Core Inflation vs. Headline Inflation

Headline inflation includes all goods and services — including volatile categories like food and energy. Core inflation strips out food and energy to give a cleaner picture of underlying price pressures, since food and fuel prices can swing wildly due to weather, geopolitical events, and seasonal factors.

Economists and central banks often focus on core inflation because it is a better indicator of long-term price trends. During the 2022 energy crisis triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, headline inflation surged while core inflation rose more slowly — illustrating the difference clearly.

Other Inflation Measures

The Producer Price Index (PPI) tracks prices at the wholesale level — what businesses pay for raw materials and inputs. Since producer cost increases often pass through to consumers, PPI is considered a leading indicator of future consumer inflation. The PCE Deflator (Personal Consumption Expenditures) is the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge, as it adjusts for changes in consumer behaviour.

📊 Key Stat: The U.S. CPI peaked at 9.1% year-on-year in June 2022 — the highest level since November 1981, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

What Causes Inflation?

Inflation does not happen randomly. It is driven by specific economic forces. Economists generally group the causes into three main categories.

1. Demand-Pull Inflation

This occurs when demand for goods and services grows faster than supply. When consumers, businesses, and governments are all spending heavily at the same time, sellers can charge more because buyers are competing for a limited supply of products. The COVID-19 pandemic triggered a textbook demand-pull surge: governments injected trillions in stimulus, consumer savings built up during lockdowns, and then spending exploded when economies reopened — all hitting supply chains that were still recovering.

2. Cost-Push Inflation

This happens when the cost of producing goods rises, and businesses pass those increases on to consumers. Key drivers include rising energy prices, higher raw material costs, supply chain disruptions, and wage increases. The 2021–2022 inflation surge had a strong cost-push element: oil and gas prices soared, shipping costs tripled, and semiconductor shortages pushed up the price of everything from cars to appliances.

3. Built-In (Wage-Price) Inflation

This is a self-reinforcing cycle. When workers expect prices to keep rising, they demand higher wages. When businesses pay higher wages, their costs go up — so they raise prices. This feeds back into further wage demands. Central banks fear this "wage-price spiral" most, because once it takes hold, it is very hard to break without aggressive interest rate hikes and a painful economic slowdown.

4. Monetary Inflation

When a government prints too much money, the value of each unit of currency falls — so prices rise. This is famously described in the economic principle: "too much money chasing too few goods." The most extreme historical examples include Weimar Germany in the 1920s and Zimbabwe in the 2000s, where hyperinflation wiped out savings overnight. Modern central banks use sophisticated monetary policy tools to prevent this, but quantitative easing programmes after the 2008 crisis and again in 2020 contributed to the inflationary pressures that followed.

Cause of Inflation

Mechanism

Recent Example

Demand-Pull

Consumer/government spending outpaces supply

Post-COVID stimulus boom, 2021

Cost-Push

Rising production costs passed to consumers

Energy crisis post-Ukraine invasion, 2022

Built-In (Wage-Price)

Rising wages → rising prices → further wage demands

UK wage-price pressures, 2022–2023

Monetary

Excess money supply devalues currency

Quantitative easing aftermath, 2020–2021

Supply Shock

Sudden disruption to supply of key commodities

Oil embargo 1973, war in Ukraine 2022

Which Categories Are Hit Hardest?

Inflation does not affect all goods and services equally. Some categories experience far steeper price rises than others, and this varies significantly depending on the economic shock driving inflation.

During the 2021–2023 surge, energy prices led the charge. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, energy prices rose over 41% year-on-year in June 2022 alone. Food prices followed, surging globally as the Ukraine war disrupted wheat, sunflower oil, and fertiliser exports. Housing costs — particularly rent — proved the most persistent category, remaining elevated long after energy prices moderated.

Why Housing Inflation Is So Stubborn

Housing is unique because it is the largest single expense for most households, and supply is slow to respond to demand. When interest rates rise to fight inflation, mortgage rates increase — which can actually push rents higher, since potential buyers are priced out of ownership and remain renters for longer. This "shelter inflation" accounted for over half of the total U.S. core CPI reading throughout 2023, according to BLS data.

How Inflation Affects Your Money

Inflation is not just an abstract economic statistic. It has direct, concrete consequences for your personal finances — your savings, your wages, your debt, and your investments.

Your Savings Lose Value

If you hold cash in a savings account earning 1% interest while inflation runs at 7%, you are effectively losing 6% of your purchasing power every year. After ten years of this, your money would buy roughly 46% less in real terms. This is why financial advisors consistently stress the importance of investing — holding cash during inflationary periods is a guaranteed way to lose wealth.

Real Wages vs. Nominal Wages

Your nominal wage is the number on your payslip. Your real wage is what that number can actually buy. When inflation rises faster than wages, your real wage falls — even if your salary increases. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, real average hourly earnings fell for 25 consecutive months between mid-2021 and mid-2023, meaning workers were earning more money but losing ground in terms of purchasing power.

Debtors vs. Savers: Inflation's Unequal Impact

Inflation actually helps people with fixed-rate debt. If you borrowed $200,000 on a 30-year fixed mortgage, the real value of that debt erodes with inflation. Your monthly payment stays the same in dollar terms, but those dollars are worth less each year. Conversely, lenders and savers are hurt — the money they are owed or have saved is worth less when it is returned to them.

How Investments Are Affected

Different asset classes respond very differently to inflation. Equities can provide a partial hedge if companies can pass rising costs on to consumers, though rising interest rates — used to fight inflation — typically suppress stock valuations. Real estate and commodities (including gold and oil) have historically provided the best inflation protection. Bonds suffer most, since their fixed interest payments are eroded by rising prices.

📊 Key Stat: Real average hourly earnings in the US declined for 25 consecutive months between June 2021 and June 2023, meaning workers were paid more but their money bought less — according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

How Central Banks Fight Inflation

When inflation rises above target, central banks are the primary institution responsible for bringing it back under control. Their main tool is the interest rate — specifically, the short-term rate at which commercial banks can borrow money from the central bank.

How Interest Rate Hikes Work

When the central bank raises its benchmark interest rate, borrowing becomes more expensive throughout the entire economy. Mortgage rates rise. Business loans cost more. Credit card rates increase. This slows consumer spending and business investment — reducing the demand that drives inflation. The mechanism is powerful but blunt: it does not discriminate between useful spending and wasteful spending.

Between March 2022 and July 2023, the U.S. Federal Reserve raised its benchmark rate from near zero to 5.25–5.50% — the fastest series of rate hikes in 40 years. The European Central Bank followed a similar path, taking its deposit rate from -0.5% to 4.0% over the same period.

The Trade-Off: Growth vs. Price Stability

The danger of aggressive rate hikes is that they can overshoot — slowing the economy so much that unemployment rises and growth stalls. This is called a "hard landing." Central banks aim for a "soft landing": slowing inflation without triggering a recession. It is extremely difficult to achieve, and the success of the Fed's 2022–2024 cycle in doing so — with the US economy remaining resilient — was widely regarded as a rare policy achievement.

Other Tools: QT and Forward Guidance

Quantitative tightening (QT) is the process of shrinking a central bank's balance sheet by selling or not renewing the bonds it purchased during quantitative easing. This reduces the money supply and reinforces the effect of rate hikes. Forward guidance — communicating clearly about future policy intentions — shapes expectations and can itself dampen inflationary psychology before a single rate change is made.

Central Bank Tool

How It Works

Effect on Inflation

Interest Rate Hikes

Makes borrowing more expensive; slows spending

Reduces demand-pull inflation

Quantitative Tightening (QT)

Shrinks money supply by selling bonds

Reduces monetary inflation

Forward Guidance

Signals future rate intentions to markets

Manages inflation expectations

Reserve Requirements

Limits how much banks can lend out

Restricts credit creation and spending

💡 Quick Fact: The U.S. Federal Reserve raised interest rates 11 times between March 2022 and July 2023, taking the federal funds rate from 0–0.25% to 5.25–5.50% — the fastest tightening cycle since the early 1980s.

For a deeper understanding of how oil price movements trigger inflation, see Why Oil Prices Affect Inflation. To understand what drives commodity price cycles, read our Complete Guide to Oil Prices.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is inflation always bad?

Not necessarily. A low, stable inflation rate of around 2% per year is considered healthy for a growing economy. It encourages spending and investment over hoarding cash, and gives central banks room to stimulate the economy during downturns. Inflation only becomes damaging when it rises rapidly, unpredictably, or significantly above the 2% target — as happened globally in 2021–2023. Deflation, the opposite of inflation, can be even more destructive to economic growth.

Who suffers most from high inflation?

High inflation disproportionately hurts people on fixed incomes — pensioners, low-wage workers, and those relying on benefits — because their income does not rise with prices. People with significant savings in low-interest accounts also lose real wealth. Conversely, those with fixed-rate debt (like a 30-year mortgage) and assets that appreciate with inflation (like property or equities) are partially shielded. Inflation is fundamentally regressive — it hits the less wealthy hardest.

What is hyperinflation and can it happen in developed countries?

Hyperinflation is an extreme, out-of-control form of inflation, typically defined as a monthly rate above 50%. Historical examples include Weimar Germany (1923), Zimbabwe (2008), and Venezuela (2018). In these cases, governments printed vast amounts of money to pay debts, destroying confidence in the currency. Developed economies with independent central banks and credible monetary frameworks are highly unlikely to experience hyperinflation — but not immune, which is why central bank credibility is so closely guarded.

How does inflation affect interest rates on my mortgage or savings?

Central banks raise interest rates to fight inflation — and commercial banks quickly pass those increases on. When the Fed raises rates, mortgage rates, car loan rates, and credit card rates all typically rise within weeks. Savings account rates also rise, though usually more slowly and to a lesser extent. If you have a variable-rate mortgage, inflation fighting directly increases your monthly payments. If you have savings, higher rates mean you finally earn a meaningful return — but only if the savings rate exceeds inflation in real terms.

Will inflation come back after falling in 2023–2024?

Most economists expect inflation to settle back near the 2% target in major developed economies over 2025–2026 — but risks remain. Ongoing geopolitical tensions (trade wars, energy supply disruptions, conflict in the Middle East and Ukraine), a resurgence of consumer demand, or premature interest rate cuts could reignite price pressures. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) in its 2024 World Economic Outlook projected global inflation to fall to 4.4% in 2025 from a peak of 8.7% in 2022 — progress, but with the caveat that the disinflation path is "bumpy."

Conclusion

Inflation is one of the most powerful forces in economics — invisible, relentless, and deeply consequential for every person who earns, saves, or spends money. The 2021–2023 inflation surge was a generational economic shock, triggered by a perfect storm of pandemic stimulus, supply chain disruption, and energy crisis. Central banks responded with the most aggressive interest rate tightening in decades.

Understanding inflation is not just academic. It directly shapes the decisions you make about your money — where to keep your savings, what assets to hold, how to think about debt, and what to expect from your wages. The key lessons to carry forward:

  • Inflation erodes the purchasing power of money over time — even at "normal" levels of 2–3%, the effect compounds significantly over years and decades.

  • Central banks control inflation primarily through interest rates — and their decisions ripple through every corner of the economy, from mortgages to stock markets.

  • Not all categories of inflation are equal — energy spikes fast but corrects; housing is slow to rise but stubbornly persistent.

Sources