A S$3,000 monthly budget used to feel like a reasonable baseline to get by.
Today, it leaves us wondering where all our money went.
The culprit here is inflation.
Singapore’s core and overall inflation in 2026 is projected to average between 1.5% and 2.5%.
While 2.5% might seem manageable, inflation isn’t obvious at first glance; it is gradual and persistent.
What Is Really Happening: The Power of Inflation
Prices did not explode overnight, but the kopi costs more, and your grocery basket feels lighter.
A mere increase of 2% is enough to make life more expensive.
Putting things into perspective, transport, food, and healthcare that cost S$20 in 2025 would have cost around S$14.40, S$15.70, and S$16.50 respectively in 2015.
Where Your S$3,000 Budget Is Being Eroded
Food and Groceries
As an import-dependent nation, Singapore is highly sensitive to any disruption in global supply chains.
For instance, recent spikes in fuel costs driven by the Middle East tensions have a direct and immediate impact on domestic logistics.
Consequently, businesses often pass these rising overheads to consumers, driving up the cost of everyday essentials.
Transport and Fuel
As seen in recent days, higher global oil benchmarks directly increase the cost of private transport.
These costs also permeate into the broader ecosystem, influencing public transport fares and ride-hailing premiums.
Whether it’s refuelling a vehicle or tapping a transit card, mobility is steadily taking up a larger slice of your monthly budget.
Housing and Utilities
Similarly, regulated electricity and gas tariffs have increased for the April to June 2026 quarter, with authorities warning that subsequent adjustments may see even sharper hikes as the full impact of global fuel price volatility is realised.
In addition, property maintenance fees and general upkeep expenses continue to trend upward.
For tenants, maintaining a manageable housing budget is increasingly challenging as landlords often pass these cost increases through to protect investment yields from inflationary pressure.
Lifestyle Inflation
Subscription services and app-based convenience purchases often implement incremental price hikes that go unnoticed.
For example, when Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) launched in Singapore in 2016, its Basic, Standard and Premium plans were $10.98, $13.98, and $16.98 respectively.
Today, those same plans are now S$15.98, S$22.98, and S$29.98.
On their own, these changes appear small.
However, their cumulative effect can significantly diminish discretionary income.
The Long-Term Impact
Wage growth doesn’t always keep pace with inflation, leading to a decline in purchasing power..
In 2023, for instance, real wages grew by a marginal 0.4% against an inflation rate of 4.8%.
Furthermore, wage appreciation remains uneven across sectors, leaving some workers with stagnant income while costs continue to rise.
This imbalance poses a significant threat to long-term financial security.
When your savings do not yield interest that keeps pace with inflation, the real value of your capital diminishes over time.
Consequently, major life objectives – such as retirement, education, and housing – can become more costly than anticipated.
Underestimating this corrosive effect often leads to funding shortfalls, where a retirement plan that once seemed sufficient no longer supports your desired standard of living.
What You Can Do to Protect Your Purchasing Power
Invest for Growth, Not Just Safety
Money in your savings account may feel safe, but it can rarely keep pace with inflation.
Investing in growth assets such as equities and real estate investment trusts (REITs) is one way to outpace rising costs.
For instance, shares of Keppel Ltd. (SGX: BN4) purchased on 27 April 2021 would have delivered 109.2% in capital appreciation, as the share price rose from S$5.55 per share to S$11.55 over the five-year period.
Although growth investments involve short-term volatility, the overall objective is to achieve sustained appreciation that enhances the real value of your wealth.
Build Income Streams
Developing additional income streams through dividend-paying stocks can effectively offset rising expenses.
Companies like DBS Group (SGX: D05), Singapore Exchange (SGX: S68), and Venture Corporation Limited (SGX: V03) are established dividend payers that also offer potential for capital growth.
Consistent dividend income can act as a financial buffer, reducing inflationary pressure on your primary earnings.
Review and Adjust Your Budget
Get into the habit of tracking your spending patterns to maintain financial control.
Identify specific areas where costs are escalating and pivot toward more cost-effective alternatives.
Simple adjustments include prioritising meal preparation, or opting for public transport over ride-hailing.
This can help manage your monthly cash flow even as prices continue to climb.
Common Mistakes People Make
Assuming that a 2% inflation is “low enough” to ignore is an expensive mistake many make.
Inflation compounds over time, and these small but steady increases can significantly erode your long-term purchasing power.
SImilarly, holding too much cash is also a common pitfall.
While having some liquidity is important for an emergency, stagnant cash that fails to earn returns above the inflation rate is effectively losing value every day.
At the same time, many fail to adjust their financial strategies as economic conditions shift.
Budgets and investment plans drafted five years ago may no longer be relevant in today’s price environment.
When you underestimate inflation, long-term financial goals like retirement often become more capital-intensive than initially projected.
Without regular reviews, these valuation gaps may only become apparent when it is too late to adjust your trajectory.
Get Smart: Inflation Is Silent and Persistent
Inflation is not just an economic headline.
It is a direct tax on your cost of living.
The same S$3,000 today will inevitably diminish over the next five years.
The smartest investors start growing their income and optimise their investments today to outpace the effects of tomorrow’s inflation.
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Disclosure: Wenting A. does not own shares of any companies mentioned.



