Beating Inflation: A Spending Plan Even Congress Might Agree On (Someday)

From 2018 to the end of 2024, the cost of living has shot up by 36.8%. If you spent $50,000 a year in 2018, you’d need $68,400 today to maintain the same lifestyle. And if we narrow it down to just the last three years? Prices have risen by 21.3% since 2021—that’s a lot of extra cash just to keep up. So, while Congress debates, vetoes, and reintroduces plans that may or may not ever see the light of day, here’s how to take control of your own money, stretch your dollars further, and ensure you’re running your household better than DC runs the country.

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Breaking the Paycheck-to-Paycheck Cycle

Living paycheck to paycheck means relying entirely on each paycheck to cover expenses, with little to no savings or financial cushion. Typically, this means spending 95% or more of your income on expenses, leaving little room for an emergency fund, debt reduction, or unexpected costs. If income were delayed or stopped even briefly, essential bills and obligations could not be met without going into debt.

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