Imagine you're playing with your toys, and every time you add a new toy to the pile, it gets harder to balance, that’s like inflation. When more money is printed or created (like getting extra toys), prices go up because there are more coins and bills chasing the same number of goods. But sometimes this happens too fast, and things become unbalanced, that's when inflation fluctuates wildly.
Examples
- When the government prints more money and gives it out during a holiday season, toy prices go up quickly because there are too many kids wanting them.
- If you get a new allowance every week instead of once a month, you might spend your money faster, just like when more money enters the economy quickly.
- A pizza shop adds new toppings all at once to attract customers, but the cost goes up sharply.
Ask a question
See also
- Why Do Inflation Rates Go Up When Everyone's Spending More?
- Why Do Inflation Rates Differ Between Countries?
- Why Do Inflation Rates Change So Suddeny?
- Why Do Inflation Rates Change So Often?
- Why Do Inflation Rates Differ So Much Between Countries?