Money is like a cookie that can grow or shrink depending on what happens around it.
Imagine you have 10 cookies now. If your friend promises to give you more cookies next week, those 10 cookies might feel less special, because maybe the cookies will be bigger or better later. On the other hand, if your friend says they’ll take some of your cookies next week, your 10 cookies feel like a lot more right now.
Inflation is when all the cookies (or money) become smaller over time, like when you buy a toy that used to cost 5 cookies but now costs 7. That means each cookie isn’t as valuable anymore.
Interest is like when your friend says, “I’ll give you extra cookies if you wait.” If you save your cookies and get more later, it’s like money growing in a jar, the longer you wait, the more you have.
Sometimes grown-ups use special words like "value of money", but really, it's just about how many cookies (or things) your money can buy now versus later. And that’s something you can understand from the very first cookie!
Examples
- Inflation makes your money less powerful over time.
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See also
- Why Do Inflation and Interest Rates Go Hand-in-Hand?
- What are inflation rises?
- Why Do Inflation and Interest Rates Play Tag?
- Why Do Inflation Rates Change So Suddeny?
- Why Do Inflation Rates Change So Much?