What causes inflation and how does it affect purchasing power?

Inflation is when prices go up, and it makes your money less powerful at buying things.

Imagine you have a piggy bank full of cookies, each cookie is like a dollar. At the store, one toy costs 5 cookies. But if inflation happens, now that same toy might cost 7 or even 10 cookies! It's like the store is asking for more cookies to buy the same toy. That’s what happens when prices go up, you need more money to get the same stuff.

How Inflation Happens

Think of it like a game of tag. If too many people start running at once, it gets harder to catch everyone. Similarly, if there are more things being bought and sold (like toys, candy, or clothes), but not enough money going around, prices go up, that's inflation!

What It Does to Your Money

When prices rise, your purchasing power goes down. That means you can buy fewer things with the same amount of money. If you used to be able to buy 10 candies for a dollar, now maybe only 6, it’s like your money got smaller!

So, inflation is like when your piggy bank cookies become lighter, and suddenly they don’t go as far at the store.

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Examples

  1. Imagine a bakery that raises the price of bread because it costs more to buy flour now.
  2. Your parents used to buy a car for $10,000, but now it's $20,000, that’s inflation in action.
  3. When everyone wants to buy the same toy at once, its price goes up.

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