Higher inflation = greater heartburn
Let us see how inflation eats into your savings or returns from other investments you have made for the long term.
Let's say you have deposited Rs 100 in a one-year fixed deposit scheme at 10% interest per annum. At the end of one year, you will get Rs 110 -- this includes the principal (Rs 100) and the interest (Rs 10).
You might be surprised to learn that the 10% return you earned on your investment is not the return you actually get. Your actual return is calculated by taking reducing the impact of inflation on this 10% return -- in this case, Rs 10.
The 10% return that you get on your FD is the nominal rate of return. Once you deduct the inflation rate from this nominal rate what you get is the real rate of return. And this is what should really matter to you as an investor.
Assuming an inflation rate of 5%, your real rate of return would turn out to be only 5%, that is nominal rate � inflation rate = real rate of return. So the Rs 110 that you will get will be able to buy goods only worth Rs 105 when your FD matures after a year.
In other words, a pair of sneakers that you bought for Rs 100 this year may cost your Rs 108 next year, if inflation rate then is 8%. However, if the inflation rate is, say, only 2% in 2008 then the same pair will cost you Rs 102.
Remember. Higher the rate of inflation greater is the heartburn.
It is exactly for this reason that governments and central banks (in India it is the job of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to control inflation by adopting various tools at its disposal) all over the world to tame inflation).
Different economies are comfortable with different levels of inflation rate. If the RBI is comfortable with an inflation rate of 5.5% then the US central bank, the US Federal Reserve, is comfortable with only 2% inflation rate. Most developed countries like the US, the UK, Germany, France, Italy and Japan have low tolerance towards inflation.