> I'm not a finance expert so feel free to show me the fallacies of my reasoning!
Your reasoning is sound. And it's actually worse than that - the reported inflation in the US (CPI) vastly underestimates realistic costs of living. I would assume that's true in Germany and the rest of the world as well.
Officially, it is 1.7%. However, that includes hedonistic adjustments (you can buy a TV now for $70 that is equivalent to a $2000 TV from 30 years ago; therefore, $70 today is worth $2000 of 30 years ago; weighted by the relative part of your expenses that go towards buying TVs), "owner equivalent rent", which is a speculation by a sampling of home owners about how much rent they would have paid to live in their own house (are they over estimating? underestimating?), some measures ignore food and energy costs (who needs either?) and other shenanigans that make the numbers easy to manipulate on one hand, and impossible to reproduce on the other.
Unless the majority of your expenses are technology related and unchanging (you still happy with your Apple ][ performance, right?), the CPI is probably closer to 5% per year for a while now. Health, Education, Energy, Food and housing, which are responsible for most of everyone's expenses have been appreciating at a much faster rate than the official "inflation".
Your reasoning is sound. And it's actually worse than that - the reported inflation in the US (CPI) vastly underestimates realistic costs of living. I would assume that's true in Germany and the rest of the world as well.
Officially, it is 1.7%. However, that includes hedonistic adjustments (you can buy a TV now for $70 that is equivalent to a $2000 TV from 30 years ago; therefore, $70 today is worth $2000 of 30 years ago; weighted by the relative part of your expenses that go towards buying TVs), "owner equivalent rent", which is a speculation by a sampling of home owners about how much rent they would have paid to live in their own house (are they over estimating? underestimating?), some measures ignore food and energy costs (who needs either?) and other shenanigans that make the numbers easy to manipulate on one hand, and impossible to reproduce on the other.
Unless the majority of your expenses are technology related and unchanging (you still happy with your Apple ][ performance, right?), the CPI is probably closer to 5% per year for a while now. Health, Education, Energy, Food and housing, which are responsible for most of everyone's expenses have been appreciating at a much faster rate than the official "inflation".