Average American who buys a $30k car. Do you know what he actually ends up paying? More like 60k.
Total payments on a $500k home is $1.5 million.
If you bot a $100 vacuum cleaner at target and paid the minimum for a year.. guess what, u paid $120.
Fed's inflation metrics are all mucked up. Retail price does not capture true cost to consumer. They don't account for interest payments over time on financed purchase, which is like 99% of all purchases in America.
Someone's 25k credit card bill used to buy furniture at 19.99% APR, paid off years later, he actually spent like $62,000.
They keep retail prices "down", by assumption that most will be on credit purchases. Without which spending would PLUMMET. Someone else is then making off the REAL price of what u purchase. Margins are really built on interest income.
Most major retailers now offer their own financing. More and more they rely on interest to pump margins and growth. Fed's metrics on inflation via retail price is completely and utterly flawed.
Deception, temptation and theft.