Protect Your Financial Future From the Slow Leak of Inflation

Rick KahlerAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Have you ever been tempted to ignore a dripping faucet? Just a drop here and there doesn’t look like much, but leave it long enough and you’ve got water damage.

Inflation works the same way. Ignoring it is like letting a faucet drip in the basement—easy to overlook in the short term and likely to cause real damage over time. The slow but steady leaking away of purchasing power can soak through your savings if you’re not paying attention.

A relatively modest inflation rate of 2% or 3% shrinks the value of a dollar by 20% to 26% over ten years. A higher rate reduces the dollar’s purchasing power even more dramatically. This is the case even when the inflation increase, like the post-pandemic spike in 2022, is relatively brief. Inflation may drop back to previous levels, but prices don’t go down accordingly. Instead, they go back to rising at a slower pace.

What kind of maintenance does it take to prevent inflation leakage? Here are a few suggestions.