I don't think you're understanding inflation correctly, but yes- it screws us all over.
Let's say the currency of choice was pinecones.
A loaf of bread costs three pinecones, and lets say people make 40,000 pinecones a year on average.
Now, if we stop right there... everyone is earning income, everyone can spend that income on what they need to live.
If you get ahead you can invest- or SAVE and eventually buy a house. What a concept!
But houses cost hundreds of thousands of pinecones, so the only way you can get one is to get a loan where the vast majority of your pinecones go
towards the interest to the loan giver, and you wind up paying 3-5 times more for that house than it should cost, over years.
Every fall, the government combs the forrest for pinecones and introduces them into the market via government projects, stimulus packages,
"donations", bribes, what have you. Because of this, there's more pinecones to go around- EVERY YEAR. That's inflation. The US government just decided
to throw another 1.5 trillion pinecones into circulation.
If you own property, or have debt, this could be good for you in the long run, because each one of YOUR pinecones is worth LESS when there are more to
go around. If you're trying to save money to get ahead, or just scraping by, this is BAD for you- because your average income is still 40,000
pinecones a year, but suddenly there's 20% more pinecones to go around so the cost of food, heat, electricity, rent, and building materials are all
guaranteed to go up at least 20% more, other factors not accounted for. So unless you got a 20% pay raise this year, and last year, and next year...
that inflation is giving you a pay cut every year.
Now- when you said inflation "goes back down", this is where I don't think you're following along. Inflation never went back down- it might have
slowed, but the only way for it to go down would be to remove money from the money supply, and cause deflation.
The cost of your bread might drop back down to four pinecones, but that's not deflation- your money is worth less still, but the
supply/demand/transport/raw material costs all also factor into that given product.
There's a neat little cartoon series (15 minutes in total?) that isn't covering inflation directly, but does a fantastic job explaining what's going
on here:
Common Sense Soapboxedit on 15-3-2022 by
lordcomac because: (no reason given)