Today, I read a Twitter thread about inflation and its impact on money. So many people feel that their paycheques are not going as far as they did before. Their net income is going to shelter, groceries, and utilities. Yet, they feel that it’s harder and harder to survive from one paycheque to the next. Costs are going up while their pay remains the same. They are caught in the grip of inflation, which I like to call the Non-Stop Money-Eater.
I’ve noticed it too. The bulk package of chicken breast at my local grocery store was $27 this time last year. When I went to buy the same package 6 weeks ago, I paid $42. That’s a price jump of $15 in 12 months, or an increase of 55%. That’s inflation at work. My $27 won’t buy me as much chicken today as it did last year. And I’m a Single Person. Every time I leave the grocery store, I wonder how people with families afford their grocery bills. (As a matter of fact, I asked a friend of mine how much their 6-person family spends on groceries in a month. The answer was $2,000. Even accounting for cleaning supplies and personal care products, that’s a huge grocery bill!)
Inflation is a serious problem, for everyone. The lower your income, the more severe its impacts on your household finances. If you’re fortunate enough to have extra money in your budget, then you can better absorb the increased prices. However, your paycheque or investment returns have to continuously outpace inflation. If they don’t, you will eventually reach a point where your income is not enough to cover the higher costs resulting from inflation’s impact on everything.
Inflation Erodes Purchasing Power
Simply put – the Non-Stop Money-Eater will decimate your finances, if given enough time. You can only tighten your belt so much. Even if you got a second or third job, there are only so many hours in a day. You were not put on this Earth to simply work and pay bills. There should be more to life than scrimping from one payday to the next.
At the time of this post, inflation in Canada was at 4.2%. This is the macro number used by the government. Your personal inflation rate might be higher, or lower, depending on your personal expenses. Whether a large number or a small one, the result is the same. Your income is not buying you as much today as it did yesterday. It will take more money to buy the same amount. That means you have less money for everything else. So unless you want to live off your credit cards, or lines of credit, and pay interest to do so, you will have to eliminate something from your budget. Fewer streaming services? A cheaper place to live? Giving up your car?
Again, your life should be more than the daily grind of working, getting paid, paying bills, then working some more. You should be able to breathe without financial anxieties. We can’t all own private jets, third houses, and a stable of Arabian horses. However, you should be able to find your happy medium between barely scraping by and a life of unfathomable extravagance.
For those of you whose incomes are still growing, congrats! You may not have to alter your lifestyle since your purchasing power is keeping up with inflation.
A Few Suggestions
What is the answer to fighting inflation on a personal level? I honestly don’t have a perfect answer that will work well for everyone. I’m not an expert about such things. What I will do is share my opinion on how to dull inflation’s impact if you’re fortunate enough to have some extra money in your budget after you’ve paid for the necessities.
My first suggestion is make good use of your kitchen. I’ve written before about how financially prudent it is to cook the majority of your food at home. A hamburger with fries at restaurants around me will run you atleast $17, and the bottomless soft drink is another $3.50. After tax and tip, the bill is atleast $26. The same money spent at the grocery store combined with 30 minutes in your kitchen will result in far more than 1 hamburger with a side of fries.
Don’t let lack of cooking skills stop you. Thanks to YouTube, you can learn to cook just about anything by watching a few videos and paying attention. Start small then work your way up to the more complicated meals. Maybe you start making your own muffins and cookies so that you don’t have to buy them each day. Then you move on to making simple breakfasts and tasty lunches. Afterwards, you tackle dinner and turn your attention to batch cooking. Your freezer and pantry become your happy places, since they are key to making your tummy and wallet happy too. Much like piano playing and walking, cooking skills get much better with repeated practice. You’ll figure out what you like to eat, and then you’ll master those dishes. Cooking for yourself should be your default choice when you start to feel hungry.
And it’s not too early to start planning for next year. One of my favorite personal finance bloggers has a vegetable garden. Each year, he plants vegetables and harvests them as they ripen. You better believe that his veggie garden saves him a good chunk of money each year. We’re well into autumn and winter’s just around the corner so now’s the time to start thinking about planting next spring. Do you have the room for your own garden? Is there a community garden nearby? Do you have a balcony that can hold a few planters? If you’ve never planted a garden before and you want to, use your downtime in winter to watch and to learn from some gardening videos on YouTube.
My second suggestion is to use your freezer and to stock up on things when they’re on sale. Low-sodium bacon was on sale last week. My mother, my aunts, and I all made sure to get some for our respective freezers. In my corner of the world, bacon is now $1/slice! That was unheard of last year but I doubt the price will fall back to its former level any time soon. My mother and her sisters are all ladies in their 70s & 80s, so they use an old-fashioned app called “a telephone” to share the great prices that they find at the grocery store.
I’m willing to be that you, Dear Reader, have a cell phone. I’ll go out on a limb and assume that you’ll probably want to use apps on your phone to find good prices when you are grocery shopping. Never forget that coupons are your friend. I have an app on my phone that sends me weekly offers on things that I buy most often. When I buy those things, I get points and those points translate to dollars off my grocery total. It’s fantastic to have a bill of $110.77 and only have to pay $0.77 because my points-into-dollars covered the rest.
It should go with out saying that price-matching is an essential tool in your arsenal. Some grocery stores will match a competitor’s price on the same item. This is another way to save money without going to several grocery stores in order to buy the same product at the lowest price. You need to eat, but you don’t have to pay more than necessary to do so.
My third suggestion is to continue investing for the long-term. The capitalist system is not designed to make employees rich. Read that sentence a few more times, and let it sink in until you’ve memorized it better than the alphabet.
Employees’ salaries are a cost of doing business. Every business has a profit-motive. This means that every business benefits by lowering its costs. Lower costs translate into higher profits. Your employer has little, if any, incentive to pay you more money to do your job.
In sharp contrast, there is a built-in incentive to align the interests of investors with the interests of business owners. The corporations need shareholders’ money, or else they wouldn’t sell stock in their company. By investing in low-cost equity exchange-traded funds, you will increase your chances of creating a cash flow that can sustain you. By all means, keep your job if you need it to survive. What I’m telling you is to wear two hats. Be an employee and an investor. If all goes according to plan, then you’ll be doubling your sources of income. Should inflation erode the income from your job, you’ll have your investment income available if you absolutely need it to survive.
No Easy Answers For Everyone
In my humble and inexpert opinion, inflation is not going away any time soon. The cost of necessities will continue to rise, which is not going to be fun. You will need to sit down and figure out how you are going to deal with Non-Stop Money-Eater. What will it take for you to limit its impact on your finances?
[…] I grew up in the ’70s (and ’80s), so inflation made a strong impression on me at a crucial age. I find it interesting to see bloggers writing a lot about inflation this year, when prior years hardly mentioned it at all. This article from Millionaire on the Prairie gave a pretty clear illustration of the problems with rising inflation, while tickling my funny bone a bit (I loved the “app” mom and aunts use). Go read Inflation is the Non-Stop Money-Eater. […]
[…] few weeks ago, I wrote about how inflation is a money-eater. I stand by that statement. Inflation makes everything more expensive. My cost of living is going up […]