Since some folks live on a fixed income, inflation hurts us more than those that have investments that are dependent on high interest rates. Inflation may go down but prices don't. In order to see the damage inflation does, you have to compare today's prices with yesteryear's prices. In many cases prices do not go down, once raised. Creating a personal budget for the year damaged by high inflation rates for retirees on a fixed income means cutting luxuries in order to pay for necessities. Like someone else said, inflation going down, does not mean costs go down. It just means that increases level off, but they do not go back to pre-inflationary prices. I am happy for those that have investments dependent on the stock market when inflation means interest rates go up, that doesn't help everyone else. Damages caused by inflation hardly ever repairs itself. I don't applaud a 3.3% inflation rate, when the damage from accumulated inflation for the last three years will take years to rebound from.
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Never take life seriously. Nobody gets out alive anyway
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