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Even if your salary keeps up with inflation, a higher nominal salary might push you into a higher tax bracket, leaving you with less take-home pay in real terms. 3. Impact on Fixed-Income Earners
Inflation acts as a de facto tax on held currency. If you have $100 today and inflation is at 5%, those same goods will cost $105 next year. If your $100 is sitting in a standard savings account earning 0.01% interest, you can no longer afford the same basket of goods. Your value is the same ($100), but your real buying power has shrunk. 2. The Wage-Price Gap inflation has no effect on your buying power
The only way inflation would have "no effect" is if your income increased at the exact same rate (or higher) than the cost of living. Even if your salary keeps up with inflation,
Inflation is the enemy of for savers and consumers. Unless your assets are invested in vehicles that outperform the inflation rate (like certain stocks, real estate, or inflation-protected bonds), your ability to buy goods and services will inevitably decline as prices rise. If you have $100 today and inflation is
For retirees living on fixed pensions or social security (without adequate Cost of Living Adjustments), inflation is a direct hit to their standard of living. Their "buying power" evaporates because their income remains static while the price of healthcare, food, and energy climbs. 4. The One "Positive": Debtors