Inflation occurs when governments print more money, causing the currency to lose value over time; this means the same physical goods (like a burger) cost more not because they improved, but because each dollar buys less, with moderate inflation around 2% being healthy for economic growth while excessive inflation erodes purchasing power and makes everyday expenses feel more expensive.
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How Your $8 Burger Quietly Became $12 đAĂąadido:
Here's the real reason your hamburger costs way more than it should.
Take two identical hamburgers. Same bun, same patty, same lettuce, same cheese.
One is from 2020.
One is from today.
Physically, nothing has changed.
But one costs $8 and the other costs $12. So what happened?
The government printed more money. When there's more cash floating around, people spend more. Businesses see that demand and think, we can charge higher prices. So they do. Your $8 burger becomes $9, then $10, then $12, and it keeps climbing. April's inflation rate hit 3.8%, the highest since May 2023.
For the first time in 3 years, inflation outpaced wage growth. Your paycheck buys less than it did before. Now, a little inflation is actually good. Around 2% is considered healthy for a growing economy. It keeps money moving and businesses expanding. But when it spikes too high, your wallet feels it immediately.
That's the difference between manageable and painful. Over time, this cycle repeats. More money gets printed, prices rise again. The same burger that cost $5 10 years ago now costs double or triple.
The burger didn't get better. The dollar just got weaker.
That process has a name, inflation.
It's not the burger changing, it's your money losing value. And that's why everything feels more expensive, because it is.
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