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What Is Inflation? Why Your ₹100 is Worth Less Every Year

Indian rupees burning slowly representing inflation

Your grandfather bought a house for ₹20,000. Today, you can't even buy a sofa for that amount. This isn't just "times changing"—this is the mathematical force of Inflation.

Ask any Indian homemaker, and she will tell you the real story of the economy better than any news anchor.

"Beta, ten years ago, milk was ₹25 per liter. Today it is ₹54."

We often ignore these small increases. ₹2 here, ₹5 there. But over 10, 20, or 30 years, these small increases snowball into a massive destruction of wealth. This phenomenon is called Inflation.

What Is Inflation, Really?

In simple terms, Inflation is the rate at which the price of goods and services rises over time. As prices rise, the Purchasing Power of your money falls.

Imagine your ₹100 note is a muscle. Every year, inflation makes that muscle weaker. It can lift less weight (buy fewer things) than it could the year before.

The Silent Thief

If you keep ₹1 Lakh in your cupboard today, and inflation is 6%:

  • Year 1: Value is ₹1 Lakh.
  • Year 2: Purchasing power drops to ₹94,000.
  • Year 10: Purchasing power drops to ~₹55,000.

You didn't lose any notes. The notes are still there. But half their value has evaporated.

The Scary "Rule of 72"

How fast will prices double? You can use a simple mental math trick called the Rule of 72.

Formula: 72 ÷ Inflation Rate = Years to double prices.

In India, the long-term average inflation is around 6-7%.

  • 72 ÷ 6 = 12 Years.

This means every 12 years, your cost of living will DOUBLE.

If you need ₹50,000/month to run your house today, in 12 years you will need ₹1 Lakh/month just to maintain the same lifestyle. In 24 years, you will need ₹2 Lakhs/month. This is why standard retirement planning often fails—people underestimate future costs.

Why Is Inflation So High in India?

Unlike developed countries (like the US or Japan), India is a developing growth economy. A little inflation is actually good—it means people are buying things and businesses are raising prices to grow.

But for the common man, two types hurt the most:

1. Food Inflation

When onions hit ₹100/kg, that's food inflation. In India, food makes up a huge part of our spending, so we feel this instantly.

2. Lifestyle Inflation

This is personal. As you earn more, you spend more. You switch from a cooler to an AC. From a budget phone to an iPhone. This isn't economic inflation; it's Lifestyle Inflation, and it's dangerous because it's invisible to you.

How to Beat Inflation

You cannot stop inflation. But you can outrun it.

To beat inflation, your money must grow at a rate higher than 6-7% (post-tax).

  • Savings Account (3%): LOSING money every year.
  • Fixed Deposit (6-7%): Breaking even. You are maintaining value, not growing it.
  • Equity/Mutual Funds (12-15%): BEATING inflation. This is the only way to build real wealth.
  • Gold (8-9%): A good hedge. It keeps pace with inflation but rarely makes you rich.

The Takeaway for Your Wallet

Don't hoard cash. Cash is a melting ice cube.

Keep 6 months of expenses in an Emergency Fund (safe, liquid cash). Invest the rest in assets like Equity and Real Estate that have a history of crushing inflation over the long term. Security doesn't come from saving; it comes from real growth.

What next?
If this article helped you understand the basics, the next logical step is to see where you stand today.
→ Learn how to calculate your net worth

In This Article

  • Meaning
  • Rule of 72
  • Why Prices Rise
  • How to Beat It

Related Topics

  • Investing Basics
  • Purchasing Power
  • Lifestyle Inflation
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