How to Protect Your Spending Power From InflationGet easy-to-understand advice and guidance in support of your financial goals with Sunmark Wealth Management.
Inflation — the rise in consumer prices — is a slow erosion of your money over time. Before 2021, the United States hadn’t seen annual core inflation much above 3% for the better part of 25 years, says Michael Ashton, managing principal of Enduring Investments, a consulting and investing firm in Morristown, New Jersey. So the 7.5% spike seen over the past year in the costs of fuel, used vehicles, groceries and just about everything else is the kind of sudden and systemic rise that can give a jolt to most peoples’ everyday spending. Ashton also says that the COVID-19 pandemic stimulus checks and tax relief, combined with the reopening of the economy, fed consumer demand but didn’t replace product inventories. The result: shortages that lead to higher prices. “Having supply chain difficulties is part of what inflation looks like,” Ashton says. With inflation chipping away at your spending power, how can you protect yourself? Examine your spending
Look for savings
Try to bring more money in
The inflation-matching savings accountAnother inflation-fighting idea: Series I savings bonds. They were created specifically to protect consumers’ purchasing power against inflation, says Zvi Bodie, professor emeritus in finance at Boston University. Bodie holds a doctorate in economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and has become an avid proponent of I bonds. I bonds rates are keyed to the rate of inflation, which lately has been over 7%, he notes. They are a perfect safe haven for near-term savings. And not a bad addition to your long-term nest egg, too. A minimum investment in I bonds through TreasuryDirect.gov is only $25, and an individual can put up to $10,000 annually into the savings bonds with electronic purchases. The bonds pay fixed interest plus the inflation rate, adjusted twice per year. You can withdraw your savings without penalty after one year, but if you cash them in before five years, you’ll lose the last three months’ worth of interest. “So what you get is essentially a savings account that can’t go down, and that’s going to go up with inflation,” Bodie adds. “Do I need to say more?” Inflation is not the same for everyoneInflation hit a 7.5% national average in January, but that’s not likely to be your inflation rate, says Ashton. You may consume different items than the average person and you may not live in an average place, so your particular rate of inflation quite likely varies from the average, according to Ashton. So, rather than agonizing over a single number as a spending power loss to recoup, use the small money moves above to improve your financial position slowly but surely.
This article was written by NerdWallet and was originally published by The Associated Press.Hal M. Bundrick, CFP® writes for NerdWallet. Email: hal@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @halmbundrick.The article How to Protect Your Spending Power From Inflation originally appeared on NerdWallet. |
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