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The Math of Staying in Cash
You have $100,000. You decide to "be safe" and keep it in cash (savings account, money market, checking).
Current savings account pays 0.5% APY. Inflation is 3% annually (historical average).
Each year, your $100,000 loses purchasing power:
- Year 1: $100,000 earns $500 interest, inflation erodes $3,000 of value. Net loss: $2,500 in real purchasing power
- Year 5: You have $102,500, but it buys what $87,000 bought 5 years ago
- Year 10: You have $105,126, but it buys what $74,000 bought 10 years ago
- Year 30: You have $118,500, but it buys what $41,000 bought 30 years ago
You didn't lose money nominally (you have more dollars than you started with). You lost wealth in real terms (purchasing power).
This is the cost of not investing. You're guaranteed a 2.5% annual loss in real wealth.
The Alternative: Investing
You take the same $100,000 and invest it in a diversified portfolio earning 7% average annual return.
Inflation is 3%, so your real return is 4% annually.
- Year 1: Investment grows to $107,000 (earning 7%), inflation erodes to equivalent of ~$103,600 in today's dollars. Real gain: $3,600
- Year 5: Investment grows to $140,255, equivalent to ~$121,000 in today's dollars. Real wealth gain: $21,000
- Year 10: Investment grows to $196,715, equivalent to ~$146,000 in today's dollars. Real wealth gain: $46,000
- Year 30: Investment grows to $761,225, equivalent to ~$284,000 in today's dollars. Real wealth gain: $184,000
By investing at 7% vs. staying in cash at 0.5%, over 30 years you've built $284,000 in real wealth instead of -$59,000 (the loss from inflation).
The difference: $343,000 in real purchasing power.
Why Inflation Is Insidious
Inflation doesn't feel urgent because it's slow. Your $100,000 doesn't disappear overnight. But compounded, it's devastating.
Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that what cost $100 in 1995 costs $188 today (roughly 3% annual inflation). Your purchasing power is cut in half every 23 years if you don't invest.
Most people don't feel this because wages nominally increase (you earn more dollars). But if your salary increases at 2% and inflation is 3%, you're getting poorer even though you're earning more.
Investing is how you outpace inflation and keep pace with (or exceed) wage growth.
The Risk of Not Investing
People often say "I'm being safe by not investing." They're wrong. Not investing is risky—it guarantees you'll lose purchasing power.
Risks of cash:
- Guaranteed inflation loss (3% annually)
- Opportunity cost (missing 7%+ market returns)
- Erosion of savings for specific goals (that $100,000 retirement goal becomes $55,000 in real value over 30 years)
Risks of investing:
- Market volatility (temporary; historically always recovers)
- Losing money in a downturn (time horizon matters; 20-year horizon typically recovers from any crash)
- Sequence of returns (bad luck timing, mitigated by diversification)
Over a 20+ year horizon, the risk of not investing (guaranteed loss of purchasing power) exceeds the risk of investing (temporary volatility, historical recovery).
Historical Returns
Data from Shiller and Morningstar show:
Stocks: ~10% average annual return (1926–2024), with significant volatility Bonds: ~5–6% average annual return, less volatile Cash: ~1–2% average annual return, minimal volatility
30-year rolling periods:
- Stocks: Lowest was 6.4% (1909–1939, includes Great Depression). Even in the worst 30-year period, stocks beat inflation and bonds.
- Bonds: ~4–5% in most periods
- Cash: ~1–2% in most periods
Even in the worst historical 30-year period, stocks outpaced inflation and bonds.
What to Invest In
You don't need to pick individual stocks. A simple approach:
Diversified portfolio:
- 80–100% index funds tracking the S&P 500 (large US companies)
- 10–20% international index fund
- 0–20% bonds (if you want stability)
This gives you exposure to thousands of companies. Buying individual stocks adds risk without higher expected returns (studies show most active traders underperform).
The Time Value of Starting
The sooner you start investing, the more time compound interest works for you.
Invest $500/month starting at age 25 at 7% returns:
- By 65: ~$1,650,000
Invest $500/month starting at age 35 at 7% returns:
- By 65: ~$550,000
Starting 10 years earlier: 3x more wealth from the same monthly contribution.
This is why "start investing early" is the best financial advice. The math is exponential.
Overcoming the Psychological Barrier
Most people don't invest because:
Fear of losing money. "What if the market crashes?" Answer: If you're not withdrawing for 10+ years, the crash doesn't matter. You'll recover.
Complexity. Investing feels hard. It's not. Opening a brokerage account and buying an index fund takes 15 minutes.
Analysis paralysis. "Which fund should I pick?" Answer: An S&P 500 index fund. Done.
Lack of money. "I can't invest, I'm broke." Answer: Even $50/month invested at 7% over 30 years becomes $83,000. Start small.
Overcome these by:
- Starting with a small amount ($50–$100/month)
- Investing automatically (so you don't have to think about it)
- Choosing a simple diversified portfolio (1–3 index funds)
- Not looking at your account balance constantly (reduces anxiety)
A Worked Example: The Cost of Delay
Person A: Starts investing at 25
- Invest: $500/month
- Age 25–65 (40 years)
- Expected return: 7%
- Final amount:
$1,650,000 in nominal dollars ($616,000 in today's dollars adjusted for inflation)
Person B: Waits until 35 to invest
- Invest: $500/month
- Age 35–65 (30 years)
- Expected return: 7%
- Final amount:
$550,000 in nominal dollars ($259,000 in today's dollars)
Person B invested the same amount monthly for 30 years but has $357,000 less in real purchasing power because they started 10 years late.
The cost of waiting: $357,000 in real wealth.
Start This Month
- Open a brokerage account: Vanguard, Fidelity, or Charles Schwab (all offer low-cost index funds)
- Invest in one fund: VTI or VOO (US stock index) or VTSAX (total stock market)
- Set up automatic monthly investment: Start with $50–$500/month
- Don't check it constantly: Avoid the urge to time the market or panic-sell in downturns
- Increase amount yearly: Every raise, increase monthly investment by 5–10%
That's it. You're now building wealth that outpaces inflation instead of losing it to inflation.
Not investing isn't safe. It's the riskiest thing you can do with money over a 20+ year horizon.




