Inflation is when things you buy every day get more expensive over time, and interest rates are like the price for borrowing or saving money.
What is inflation?
Imagine you have a favorite candy bar that costs $1 today. If inflation happens, next year it might cost $1.25, and the year after that, maybe $1.50. It’s like your favorite toy getting more expensive each time you want to buy it, even though it's still the same toy!
What are interest rates?
Now imagine you have a piggy bank. If you put money in it, sometimes you get extra money just for saving, that's interest. Interest rates decide how much extra money you get or how much more you pay if you borrow from someone else.
If the bank says "We'll give you 2% interest," that means for every $100 you save, you’ll get $2 extra after a year. But if you borrow money and the rate is high, like 5%, you might have to pay back more than what you borrowed!
So inflation and interest rates are both about money, one is about prices changing, and the other is about how much you earn or owe when you save or borrow.
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See also
- Why Do We Have Different Kinds of Taxes?
- Why Do Prices Change So Much?
- Why Do We Use Money Instead of Bartering?
- Why Do Prices Go Up So Much When There's a Shortage?
- Why Do We Have Different Kinds of Coins?