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Blog Your guide to financial planning and retirement
May 26, 2022 • 4 minutes
As of today, inflation is at around 8.5%. That is high. On average, the costs for goods and services are 8.5% higher now than last year. However, your personal inflation rate might be higher or lower than the national average.
It is important to understand that the pain inflation inflicts will vary largely from household to household. It depends on prices in your geographic location, what you spend money on, and if you have received a recent raise or not and how big of a raise it was.
There are different ways of measuring inflation. The most commonly used inflation index for households is the Consumer Price Index (CPI). It measures the costs for a specific list of goods and services.
All inflation measures can be controversial. Different indexes include or exclude certain categories that impact different parts of the population in different ways.
The specifics of what you spend money on will determine your personal inflation rate.
The New York Times recently published an interactive quiz to help you ballpark your personal inflation rate. They ask about 7 categories of spending where prices have risen a lot: automobiles, gasoline, travel, meat, home heating oil, dining out, and education.
Depending on how you answer the questions, your personal inflation rate might be as low as 5% or as high as 15%.
However, their calculations don’t account for geographic price differences and your particular shopping habits, and that is what really matters to you and your budget.
Private sector employees saw an average 4.4% increase in wages and benefits in 2021. Seems okay. This is actually an historically high increase and the fastest rise since 2001.
However, if inflation is at 8.5%, it actually means that you can purchase 4.1% fewer goods and services. Your raise is more than wiped out by the increase in costs.
That isn’t the case for CEOs whose already historically high pay rose an average of 17% last year according to research from Equilar. They are 8.5% ahead of inflation.
In 2021, the CEOs of Expedia, Warner Brothers, ServiceNow, Apple, JPMorgan Chase, Penn National Gaming, Broadcom, and FLEETCOR Technologies had the highest total compensation, which does include stocks and options. Peter M. Kern of Expedia Group got a whopping $296,247,749.
To determine your personal inflation rate, you could use the New York Times quiz. But, it won’t really get to all the details of your particular budget.
To determine your personal inflation rate, start by totaling your spending for the most recent month, April 2022. Then figure out what your expenses were in April of 2021. Subtract your total 4/22 expenses from your total for 4/212 to come up with the difference. Then, divide the difference by your 2021 total. The resulting quotient is your personal inflation rate before accounting for any increase in your income.
Formula: (2022 expenses – 2021 expenses) divided by 2021 expenses = personal inflation rate
So if you spent $5,500 in April 2022 and $5,000 in April of 2021, your personal inflation rate is:
You can use this formula to compare:
If you want to see how any recent bump in your income helps to mitigate your personal inflation rate, you would subtract the percent your income has increased from your personal inflation rate.
So, if your personal inflation rate is 6% and you got a 4% raise, your inflation rate is 2%:
Inflation, especially a high inflation rate sustained over a long period of time, can have a significant impact on your financial health, especially in retirement when you are living off of a fixed set of resources.
It is important that you are maintaining a holistic financial plan and adjusting assumptions like inflation as conditions fluctuate. (You don’t want to change your plan to use 8-8.5% for projections, but perhaps adjust your long term optimistic assumption for inflation from 2% to 3 or 3.5%.)
The Boldin Retirement Planner enables you to monitor your financial health and run scenarios for any possible condition, including inflation.
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