How to Fight Inflation
Tips to overcome inflation and interest rate hikes—especially when cash is tight.
You know how when you go to the beach, sand just inevitably finds its way into anything and everything? There’s no stopping it, whatsoever. You know it’s going to happen, and no matter what lengths you go to try and avoid it, the outcome is the same: sand everywhere.
Inflation is kind of like sand. Okay, let us explain. Inflation is a broad, macroeconomic force that finds its way into every crevice of the economy, and inevitably gets passed down, around, and all over until those price increases reach the end consumer.
It’s a natural occurrence, because in the process of every individual trying to mitigate the impacts inflation has on their own finances, (things like profit margins, budget, etc.) we end up just passing it off to others. The implications eventually come back on us in the form of higher prices.
When it comes to large scale things like inflation, we can do little to nothing to change it on our own. But, what we can do is adapt. This certainly isn’t meant to undermine the very real impacts inflation can have on our finances, or assume that adapting will solve all our money problems though.
The reality is that we find ourselves in the midst of a transitional period of sorts in the economy. As a result of that, there’s a lot of us on the fringes who are struggling to get by. And inflation just makes it even harder.
Between this, global conflict, the increasing cost of just living coupled with more expensive debt, and a jobs economy undergoing a major shift, there’s a lot on everyone’s plate. But, luckily, sometimes "adapting to change" can mean doing less—instead of more.
Adaptation doesn’t always involve actively doing things though, and it can sometimes actually mean the opposite: doing less.
Ultimately, it’s about a combination of both doing less, and doing more. Go figure! Doing less or more on its own probably won’t be enough to offset inflation’s impact entirely, but by combining a couple strategies from both departments, there's a solid bet to fare better during these uber-expensive times.
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