Inflation Correction

  

Remember learning about annoying “context clues” in lit class? Well, it’s time to whip those skills out. Inflation correction might mean different things depending on the context.

If someone is taking a wage or price, and they’re “correcting for inflation,” it probably means they’re taking inflation out of the picture, mafia style. When inflation is taken out of nominal prices (the price on the sticker, or the number on the paycheck), we get what we call the “real” price or wage. It’s “real” because it doesn’t include inflation. Inflation makes prices and wages go up and down, so it can be hard to tell what the actual value of money is.

For instance, if you took a pay cut, but the prices of everything went down around you, there’s a chance you could still buy all of the same things just the same as before. That would mean your “real wage” hasn’t changed, because your buying power hasn’t changed.

Inflation correction might also mean when the government goes back and edits the official inflation numbers. It’s not because they’re actually controlling inflation (rewriting the books, per se), but because they got it wrong. In the US, we use the Consumer Price Index, or CPI, as the main way to measure inflation, but sometimes it’s a little off.

In that case, correcting inflation means the government’s saying “sorry, guys...inflation last month was a little different than we initially thought.”

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Finance: What is Inflation and How Does ...46 Views

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Finance allah shmoop shmoop what is inflation and how does

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it work This is inflation and this is inflation and

00:11

this is infiltration but really isn't relevant So get that

00:14

out of here okay The kind of inflation were referring

00:17

to is the kind where money gets more prolific so

00:21

that prices that have stayed steady well feel cheaper All

00:25

right now what the fuck does that mean Well when

00:27

economies are good and everyone is working getting paid able

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to save money and buy themselves luxuries like ah waffle

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maker that injects maple syrup directly into the waffle While

00:39

people tend to be willing to pay more to get

00:42

stuff they'll pay two hundred dollars a person for a

00:44

one day pass to disneyland They'll buy a second car

00:47

a flashy one that gets terrible mileage but will impress

00:52

the neighbors They'll buy this thing whatever it is because

00:55

it is heart Why not there's more money to go

00:57

around Products want to increase in price Ah home in

01:00

eighteen eighty and central california might have cost a thousand

01:03

bucks that same home today Well it's been remodeled a

01:05

couple times but it might cost a quarter million dollars

01:08

Or more but annual wage or salary in eighteen eighty

01:12

Might have been two hundred dollars So that house cost

01:14

five years Wages gruel forward to today in an average

01:18

wage is fifty grand And voila Well that home also

01:21

costs about five years Wages was their inflation Oh yeah

01:25

Big time Was there really cost increase in the house

01:29

will know you had to work the same amount in

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eighteen Eighty is he do today to buy the same

01:34

house All right So why do people want inflation Like

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why did money have to go up so much When

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five yearswork buys the same today as it did one

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hundred fifty years ago Psychology mohr is more which means

01:45

better So people simply like having a bigger number Over

01:49

time it comforts them to think that they're actually gaining

01:52

traction in the financial creek in which they are paddling

01:56

Perhaps more importantly governments want inflation Why Because they borrowed

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tons and tons and tons of money But most of

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the money the governments have borrowed is in fixed terms

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or steady interest rate numbers That is the government agrees

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to sell fifty billion dollars worth of debt at two

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And a half percent interest We exist in a given

02:14

time period at a rate of two point five percent

02:17

inflation calculated as the existing costs of a basket of

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stuff that people buy You know like milk paper towels

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a six pack of bundy's dog treats heartburn medication that

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waffle thing And so on Those and many other prices

02:30

air checked in dozens of stores averaged and totaled And

02:33

a gross number comes out each year In this case

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the total basket of goods assessing inflation last year might

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have been well let's say a hundred grand for simplicity's

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sake This year that same total is one hundred two

02:44

thousand five hundred dollars that's How we got that two

02:46

point five percent annual inflation rate Okay so now there's

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a shock to the system A bomb goes off in

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a mini war start The economy booms his government's by

02:55

all kinds of us products In an effort to you

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know kill one another The bomb making factories pay a

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lot of overtime Toe workers who spend more save more

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and inflation starts to happen all of a sudden that

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carton of milk which used to be three boxes now

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four bucks and everything else moves the same direction So

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we go from a steady hundred year average rate of

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about two and a half percent a year to now

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suddenly a seven percent inflationary environment and that last for

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five years before regressing to the mean of two and

03:23

a half percent So we have five years come Found

03:25

it at a four and a half percent increase in

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inflation It quote made money cheaper unquote As for that

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fifty billion bucks the government borrowed it still has to

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pay the two and a half percent of your interest

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on lee now it's relatively way cheaper to pay back

03:39

that loan You can imagine the case that brazil had

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in desperately trying to pay back its loans many times

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in the asked by inflating its currency i eat making

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the federal borrowing rate from its treasury super cheap like

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one percent or less It made borrowing easy for businesses

03:56

and individuals and in the process drove very high inflation

04:00

rate it's almost twenty percent a year on average for

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a sustained period of time This means that the real

04:04

cost of debt drops by about fifty percent every three

04:08

And a half years or so and that the people

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who loaned the brazilians money were very very p oed

04:14

might seem like inflation then it's just a dandy thing

04:16

to have It makes loans cheaper It lets everyone pay

04:19

off their bills quicker easier better The problem is that

04:23

what happens next time A government wants to borrow money

04:26

and they have a track record of letting inflation spiral

04:29

out of control Lenders just go away How deflating hey

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