The US dollar (and the dollar of most countries) is not backed by anything. Therefore if the amount of money in circulation is x
, and overnight it becomes 2x
, that must mean the value of the dollar has halved.
During COVID, the US government injected $4.6 trillion into the economy. If you didn’t get at least 13,800$, you lost money.
But the bigger point here is the value of money has significantly decreased - And it’s not just what the inflation calculators are saying. Let’s look at some examples:
Item | 2000 | 2022 | Increase |
---|---|---|---|
Household Salary | $42k | $74k | 76% |
House | $172k | $442k | 157% |
McDonald’s Big Mac | $2.39 | $5.15 | 115% |
College Tuition | $22k | $38k | 73% |
Gas Prices (per gallon) | $1.53 | $4.06 | 165% |
Besides this graph suggesting the value of your salary has halved in 20 years, it begs a deeper question - Where is the money going? Is the economy just bad? Or is there a group benefiting from this?
We could analyze government debt vs inflation (hint: the governments are going bankrupt, and the only way to stop that is a wealth tax), but that’s a whole different topic.
Look at the distribution of wealth of the top 5 richest people in the world:
2000 | 2024 | Increase |
---|---|---|
$180 Billion | $940 Billion | 520% |
Oh look at that, we found the missing money.
So as an individual investor, what can we do with this information? Well billionaires have most of their value in their assets - Specifically, publicly traded assets.
S&P 500 index:
2000 | 2024 | Increase |
---|---|---|
$1350 | $5620 | 416% |
The takeaway is that simple.
- Have rich parents
- If you fail at step 1, try again
- Buy in the S&P 500
As long as your living expenses are a small enough fraction of your take-home income, you can still stay on top of the curve. Save and invest in index funds.