Inflation is the broad rise in prices over time. It can come from supply problems, strong demand, energy costs, housing pressures, wage changes, policy decisions, or some combination of all of these.
What happened?
Households, businesses, and governments have all had to pay closer attention to prices after several years of unusual economic shocks. Even when inflation slows, many people still feel the effect because prices usually remain higher than they were before.
Why does it matter?
Inflation affects rent, groceries, interest rates, savings, wages, business costs, and government budgets. It is not just an abstract number; it shapes the choices people can afford to make.
What it means for everyday people
Understanding inflation helps people read economic news with less confusion. The key is to watch both the inflation rate and real purchasing power: how much money people have, and what that money can actually buy.