The Citizen (Gauteng)

How inflation impacts you

DIMINISHIN­G: VALUE OF MONEY AND, THEREFORE, A REDUCTION IN BUYING POWER There are techniques that will help you reduce the impact of your life.

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Inflation can have a significan­t impact on your savings and investment­s. By its very nature, it diminishes the value of your money and reduces your buying power over time.

This is why it is critical to add inflation-beating to your investment goals, or you will find yourself in a position where your money is not worth as much as you had hoped for when you need to access it.

Factoring inflationa­ry erosion on your investment­s is essential regardless of your life stage.

During your working years, the impact of inflation is less noticeable as your income is roughly adjusted by inflationa­ry increases each year.

For those in the “accumulati­ng phase”, inflation-beating returns will ensure that your wealth grows in real terms and will have spending power in the future.

A simple way to think about this is that if you had R100 today and kept it under your mattress, that same R100 would have lost half its value in 13 years’ time (assuming a constant annual inflation rate of 5.5%).

The same principle applies to retirement savings. At retirement, your focus should be on keeping up with inflation when you are drawing an income. You need to carefully consider

inflationa­ry increases and the effect it has on your income and retirement nest egg. By the time you reach retirement, it is already too late to start thinking seriously about inflation and there is very little you can do to buffer the effects on your money.

While you may have been less aware of inflation during your working years, your retirement savings should in the very least, keep up with inflation. This approach ensures that your retirement nest egg would be sufficient to sustain your postretire­ment lifestyle.

Understand­ing the impact of inflation on your investment­s

One of my university professors defined inflation as “too much money chasing too few goods”.

For a long time, I just imagined everyone earning more and more money, but being forced to pay more for the same goods.

This led to further questions: why is everyone being forced to pay more? Why are the number of goods staying the same? How do I get to where everyone is earning more and more? This explanatio­n was too simplistic? F a s t forward a few years and I now think about inflation basically on a daily basis. For the most part I think about how we should construct portfolios that can beat inflation without taking on too much unnecessar­y risk. But why not just aim for a positive return, why add the complicati­on of beating inflation on top of that? The answer lies in the reason for investing. We invest as a method of saving and to grow our wealth. The balance between saving and growing wealth may speak to the risk profile of each individual investor. The more savings-focused you are, the more risk averse you may be as an investor. In contrast, the more growth focused you are the more inclined you would be to take on risk. Regardless of where you find yourself on this spectrum, in order to save and grow your wealth, you simply must beat inflation over time.

The impact of inflation on the price of goods

Taking the concept of inflation one step further, let’s consider the value of money and the price of goods. We think of money as rands and cents, but money enables us to buy an assortment of goods. The price of these goods increases over time.

During your working years, it is unlikely that your salary will decrease. Essentiall­y, you will earn more which means that you are more able to afford to buy the goods that you need or want.

This increased spending capacity coupled with the increase in the factors of production, forces the price of goods to increase. In a growing economy there may be scope for an increase in production which could bring more goods to market. However, in a growing economy, wages are likely to increase more as well, further fuelling the competitio­n to purchase these goods.

We get into a cycle of increasing prices of goods. But the South African Reserve Bank is geared towards keeping inflation within the target band of 3% to 6%. Manageable inflation is usually a positive sign of growth and prosperity.

Price increases are almost unavoidabl­e. Therefore, when we invest we ultimately want to be in a position in the future where we can buy more goods then, than what we can buy now as a result of the growth of our investment. This growth needs to be more than inflation to ensure that this will be the case.

So not only does my Economics 101 professor’s explanatio­n say what inflation is, it also shows how it comes about. We are forced to pay higher prices as we negotiate our wages higher and even if the production of goods increases, we will be able to pay more. After nearly 20 years I’ve realised that his explanatio­n – too much money chasing too few goods – wasn’t too simplistic after all. – Luigi Marinus, Investment Analyst at PPS Investment­s

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