Your paycheck is bigger than it was 50 years ago. But can it buy more? Not even close.
Since 1971, nominal wages in the United States have grown roughly 3,800%. Sounds impressive — until you realize that cumulative price inflation over the same period hit 4,400%. The average American worker has actually lost purchasing power over the last five decades.
We built a visual breakdown of how wages and inflation have tracked against each other, decade by decade, so you can see exactly where the gap opened — and why it keeps getting worse.
What the Infographic Covers
- Decade-by-decade comparison of wage growth vs. CPI inflation from 1971 to 2026
- The 1970s disaster — when inflation outpaced wages by 45 percentage points in a single decade
- Real-world impact cards showing what your paycheck actually buys in housing, tuition, gas, and household income
- Why a fixed-supply asset matters when wages cannot keep up with money printing
The numbers tell a story that no politician wants to talk about: working harder and earning more has not kept up with the silent tax of inflation.
View the Full Infographic: Wages vs. Inflation — Who’s Winning? →
If your strategy for building wealth is “earn more and save in dollars,” this infographic will show you why that plan has a built-in ceiling.
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