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Inflation-Adjusted Financial Assessment — How to Calculate Your Real Position

Stop looking at nominal numbers. Learn the simple formulas to calculate your actual purchasing power and see whether your investments are truly protecting your wealth.

8 min read Intermediate February 2026
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Why Nominal Numbers Don’t Tell the Full Story

Your bank statement shows your money growing. Your fixed deposit is earning 7% interest. Your savings account balance keeps climbing. But here’s what most people miss — these are nominal returns. They don’t account for inflation.

When inflation runs at 6%, that 7% interest becomes just 1% in real terms. You’re not really getting ahead. You’re treading water. The purchasing power of your rupees is quietly shrinking every month, and if you’re not calculating your real financial position, you won’t know it until it’s too late.

This is especially critical if you’re on fixed income — pensioners, salaried professionals, or anyone depending on savings. Inflation hits you differently than it hits business owners who can raise prices. Your income stays the same while your costs climb.

Close-up of calculator, notebook with financial calculations, and currency notes on wooden desk surface

The Real Returns Formula

Let’s start with the formula you actually need to know:

Real Return = Nominal Return Inflation Rate

If your fixed deposit pays 7% and inflation is 6%, your real return is just 1%. That’s not enough to build wealth. It’s barely enough to maintain it.

But there’s a more precise formula for longer-term calculations:

Real Return = ((1 + Nominal Return) (1 + Inflation Rate)) 1

This matters when you’re looking at multi-year returns. Over 10 years, that small difference compounds significantly. Your actual wealth growth becomes much smaller than the headline numbers suggest.

Laptop screen displaying spreadsheet with financial data, graphs showing declining purchasing power trends, and calculation formulas
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Calculating Your Actual Purchasing Power

Here’s what matters most: How much can your money actually buy today versus yesterday? Purchasing power tells you that story.

If you had 100,000 five years ago and inflation has averaged 5% annually, that money’s worth today is significantly less. You can’t buy as much with it. The formula is straightforward:

Purchasing Power Today = Original Amount (1 + Inflation Rate)^Years

Let’s use real numbers. That 100,000 from five years ago? At 5% average inflation, it’s worth about 78,000 in today’s money. You’ve lost 22% of buying power. That’s not just a number — it affects what you can actually afford for groceries, rent, medical expenses, everything.

Your Step-by-Step Assessment Process

Now that you understand the formulas, here’s how to actually calculate your real financial position:

01

List All Your Assets

Write down every rupee you have. Fixed deposits, savings accounts, investments, gold, property value. Get specific — don’t estimate. The accuracy of your assessment depends on knowing exactly what you own.

02

Calculate Returns in Nominal Terms

What did your investments actually earn? Look at the interest rates, dividend yields, or capital gains. These are your nominal returns. Don’t skip this — you need the baseline before you can adjust it.

03

Get the Right Inflation Rate

Use the Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation rate from the Reserve Bank of India. For your specific category of spending — if you’re tracking food costs, housing costs, medical — use that category’s inflation rate. Different things inflate at different speeds.

04

Apply the Real Return Formula

Subtract inflation from your nominal return. If your fixed deposit earned 6% and inflation was 5.5%, your real return is 0.5%. That’s what actually matters — that’s what’s really building your wealth.

05

Calculate Your Adjusted Net Worth

Take each asset and calculate what it’s worth in today’s purchasing power. Adjust it back by the inflation that’s happened since you acquired it. This shows you your real financial position, not just the number in your account.

Real Example: Fixed Deposit Assessment

You invested 5,00,000 in a fixed deposit three years ago at 7% annual interest. Inflation averaged 5.5% per year. Here’s what actually happened:

  • Nominal value today: 6,12,500 (that’s what your bank shows)
  • Real return per year: 7% 5.5% = 1.5%
  • Inflation-adjusted value: 5,78,000 (what it’s actually worth in today’s money)
  • Your real gain: 78,000 — not 1,12,500

That’s a massive difference. You thought you made 1,12,500 but you really made 78,000. The difference is gone to inflation.

What to Do When You Discover Your Real Position

Once you’ve calculated your actual purchasing power, you’ll probably feel one of two ways: either relieved that you’re doing better than you thought, or concerned that you’re not keeping up with inflation. Either way, you now have accurate information.

If your real returns are negative or near-zero, it’s time to reconsider. Fixed deposits alone won’t protect your wealth from inflation. You’re not getting richer — you’re slowly getting poorer in purchasing power terms. That’s not alarmism. That’s mathematics.

The key insight: Real returns matter more than nominal returns. A 5% real return is worth far more than an 8% nominal return that gets eroded by 6% inflation. Focus on the number that actually reflects your wealth growth.

Review your portfolio annually. Recalculate with current inflation rates. As inflation changes, your real returns change. Stay aware of what’s actually happening to your money, not just what the bank statement says.

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Disclaimer

This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It explains general concepts about inflation, purchasing power, and real returns. It is not financial advice and should not be treated as such. Individual financial circumstances vary widely — your actual returns, inflation impact, and investment strategy depend on your specific situation, location, and personal factors. Before making any financial decisions, consult with a qualified financial advisor who understands your complete financial picture. The formulas and examples provided are for illustration and educational understanding only. Past inflation rates do not guarantee future inflation, and investment returns vary based on market conditions. This content is current as of February 2026.