Deflationary pressure is when money becomes more valuable, like when your piggy bank gets heavier while everything else stays the same.
Imagine you have a toy store, and every week, you get 10 new toys to add to your shelf. But one day, your friend decides to buy all the toys at once, and only pays with 5 coins instead of 10. That means each coin is now worth more because it buys twice as many toys! This is like deflationary pressure, when people spend less money, or when prices go down, each coin (or dollar) becomes stronger.
What happens in the real world?
Think about a vending machine. If you used to need 2 coins for a candy bar, but now it only takes 1 coin, that’s like deflationary pressure, your money goes further, and things feel cheaper. But if everyone starts saving more coins instead of buying candies, the machine might not get enough coins to keep going.
So, deflationary pressure is when money becomes more valuable, just like when you can buy more toys with fewer coins!
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See also
- What is EUR?
- How do investors confirm an uptrend or downtrend in markets?
- How does inflation really erode the value of your savings?
- What are digital wallets?
- How does "quantitative tightening" affect global financial markets?