Single Income, Rising Prices: Practical Ways to Cope
Last week, while standing in line at the supermarket in Karachi, I overheard a young man sigh at the cashier. “Bro, last month this same bag of rice was 3,200. Now it’s 3,850. How are we supposed to live?”
I didn’t say anything, but it stayed with me. Because that’s the truth of inflation. It creeps into your kitchen, your commute, your children’s shoes. And if you’re like most of us — living on a single paycheck — it feels like a game you can never win.
But maybe we can. Not by magic. Not by finding a second job and burning ourselves out. Just by looking harder at what we already have.
Know where the money actually goes
I didn’t believe it at first, but my daughters made me try. “Abbu, just track it for a month,” they said. So I opened Excel, wrote down everything — the taxi rides, the tea stall bills, even the little tips you don’t think twice about.
At the end of thirty days, the sheet was almost insulting. Hundreds gone on things I didn’t even remember enjoying. A subscription here, a careless snack there.
The first rule is brutal honesty: needs, wants, savings. When you see it in black and white, you start cutting without feeling like you’re cutting joy.
Smarter, not poorer
Inflation tricks you into thinking you must live smaller. But the trick is to live smarter.
Instead of a cinema night, I now walk to the park with my grandson and we watch kites in the sky. Instead of ordering dinner twice a week, my wife and I cook in bulk on weekends — cheaper, healthier, and it even tastes better the second day.
Bills? Negotiate. Cancel what you don’t use. Coupons and cashback apps are not beneath anyone. The point is not austerity. It’s dignity.
Income is not only another job
Here’s the trap: we think beating inflation means doubling our hours. But sometimes the answer is inside the job you already have. Ask for a raise. Learn a new tool. If you can’t, then look for “quiet income” — things that tick over while you sleep.
I know a friend who rents out one room on Airbnb. Another who sells photography presets online. A cousin in Germany invests in dividend stocks, a few euros at a time. None of them became rich overnight, but over years, it compounds.
Start small. The momentum surprises you.
Why saving is not enough
This is the hardest part to accept. The bank is not your ally. If inflation is 10% and your account gives 4%, you are quietly losing 6% every year.
That’s why my younger daughter, who works in biotech in Munich, keeps telling me: “Abbu, even $50 a month in an index fund is better than nothing.” She’s right. Real estate, mutual funds, gold — even cautious dips into crypto — all carry risk. But the bigger risk is leaving money idle while prices climb.
Build an emergency fund first. Then start investing, even if the amount feels laughably small. Inflation doesn’t laugh. It eats.
The quiet conclusion
Inflation will not stop tomorrow. Politicians will promise, central banks will maneuver, and still the tomatoes will double in price.
But the decision — whether we drown under it or learn to float — lies closer to our kitchen tables than to their marble halls.
Maybe the only way to win with one paycheck is to stop playing by inflation’s rules. To stop thinking survival means suffering. And to begin treating every rupee, every dollar, as something that deserves a job.
Not lying still. Working, growing, guarding us quietly against the thief we can’t see.
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