How Does Real Wages vs. Nominal Wages (Economics 101) Work?

Real wages and nominal wages are two different ways to see how much money you're making, like looking at a toy box from the top or from the side.

Nominal wages is like counting how many toys you get every week. If your mom gives you 10 candies each day, that’s your nominal wage, it’s just the number you see.

But sometimes, candy gets more expensive. Maybe a lollipop used to cost 2 candies, but now it costs 3. That means even though you still get 10 candies every day, you can buy fewer lollipops than before. This is where real wages come in, they show how much actual stuff your money can buy.

Think of real wages like the number of lollipops you can afford each week. If candy prices go up, even if your nominal wage (number of candies) stays the same, your real wage goes down because you can’t buy as many treats.

So, nominal wages are what you earn, and real wages are what that money really buys you, like how many toys or snacks you can get with it.

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Examples

  1. A worker earns $10 per hour, but if inflation rises, they can buy fewer goods with that same wage.
  2. If a pizza costs $5 now and doubles in price next year, the real value of wages has decreased.
  3. Nominal wages are what you see on your paycheck; real wages show how much those dollars actually buy.

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