Understanding Inflation
Inflation is the rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services rises over time, eroding purchasing power. Understanding inflation is crucial for long-term financial planning.
How to Use the Inflation Calculator
Enter the current amount of money you want to evaluate, the expected annual inflation rate (historical average is about 2-3% in developed economies), and the number of years into the future. The calculator shows both what your money will be worth in future dollars and what its real purchasing power will be.
The Inflation Formula
Future purchasing power = Present Value ÷ (1 + inflation rate)^years. For example, $100 today at 3% annual inflation will have the purchasing power of only $74.41 in 10 years. Conversely, you would need $134.39 in 10 years to buy what $100 buys today. This is why investing matters — money sitting in a savings account earning less than inflation is actually losing value every year.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a typical inflation rate?
Central banks in developed countries typically target 2% annual inflation. Historical averages range from 2-3% in stable economies. However, certain periods (like 2021-2023) saw inflation spike to 6-9%. For long-term financial planning, using 3% is a reasonable conservative estimate.
How can I protect my savings from inflation?
Invest in assets that historically outpace inflation: stocks (7-10% annual returns), real estate (8-12%), inflation-protected bonds (TIPS/linkers), and commodities. Keeping large amounts in cash or low-interest savings accounts means losing purchasing power every year.