During your back-to-school shopping, did you notice that everything from jeans to notebooks was more expensive? So are groceries, gas, housing, and even haircuts.
Over the past year, the cost of goods and services in the United States has soared. Bryson Nowakowski, 11, has felt the effects firsthand. This past spring, the sixth-grader from Bradenton, Florida, was saving up for a new baseball bat. The one he wanted typically costs $200 to $250.
Bryson had saved about $150 when he checked to see if the bat was on sale. That’s when he got a big surprise: The price had jumped to $350.
“I was like, What? ” recalls Bryson. “It used to be way cheaper. I was pretty mad.”
When the price of nearly everything we buy rises, it’s called inflation. A 2 percent inflation rate is considered normal in the U.S. (At that rate, a $10 T-shirt increases in cost by about 20 cents a year.) But prices have been climbing much higher and faster than usual.
This past spring, inflation in the U.S. reached a 40-year high. From May 2021 to May 2022, prices at stores leaped by 8.6 percent. Read on to find out why this happened and when costs are expected to return to normal.