Live illustrative dashboard
Inflation Money
Watch the value of money change in real time—debt rising, prices climbing, and purchasing power slipping second by second.
Dashboard clocks
Money metrics moving now
Static JavaScript estimates animate from baseline assumptions and are intended to make long-term monetary trends easier to feel.
Why money feels broken
Prices move faster than paychecks.
When currency units expand, debts compound, and essential costs reprice, households experience money as a melting ice cube. Inflation Money turns abstract annual reports into moving clocks so the pressure becomes visible.
Inflation vs wages
The real question is not what you earn. It is what your earnings still buy.
What this site tracks
Debt, money supply, purchasing power, essentials, wages, hard assets, and alternative monetary networks.
- Debt accumulation and per-person burden
- Cash purchasing power and cumulative inflation
- Food, rent, healthcare, and education cost pressure
- Wage comparisons and asset repricing
- Gold and Bitcoin as benchmark comparisons
Debt intelligence layer
Make the national debt feel measurable, not abstract.
This section translates a moving federal balance into household-scale numbers, source notes, trend context, and next-step tools without copying another site's language or structure.
Latest Treasury-style updates
- $39.470T+$52.2B
- $39.418T+$4.9B
- $39.413T-$1.2B
- $39.414T+$19.2B
Trillion-dollar milestone tracker
53% of the way from $39T to $40T in this illustrative snapshot. The pace makes each trillion feel less like a headline and more like a countdown.
What this means
The debt clock is more useful when it explains the source, the projection, and the household translation. Inflation Money now highlights the moving total, citizen share, interest drag, and recent trend in one scannable block.
Full product idea suite
Turn the pasted inspiration into original Inflation Money modules.
The goal is not to clone a reference page. It is to cover the same user needs: live numbers, methodology, comparisons, history, shareable moments, forecasts, and ways to keep learning.
Fullscreen command center
A distraction-free wallboard for the debt clock, inflation clock, interest meter, and purchasing-power meter.
Source methodology hub
Show latest data dates, APIs used, projection formulas, refresh cadence, and what is estimated versus official.
Presidential comparison
Compare administrations by dollars added, percentage change, debt at inauguration, and debt at departure.
Historical time machine
Pick any year to see debt, wages, grocery prices, gas, rent, CPI, gold, and the dollar's remaining buying power.
Downloadable data room
Offer CSV and JSON exports for daily debt, inflation baskets, federal budget figures, and chart-ready snapshots.
Daily briefing signup
Let readers subscribe to concise updates when debt, CPI, interest costs, or dollar purchasing power crosses thresholds.
Efficiency savings ledger
Track contract, grant, lease, and agency savings claims with status labels and source links before rolling them into totals.
Trade and current account
Show goods, services, country deficits, and income-flow balances beside the debt story.
Ownership map
Break out public, intragovernmental, domestic, foreign, central-bank, and private-investor holdings.
Scenario forecasts
Model best, baseline, and stress paths for debt, GDP, interest expense, and per-person burden.
Editorial and community
Publish explainers, reader questions, feature requests, press mentions, and moderated discussion prompts.
Developer and embed tools
Provide JSON endpoints, OpenAPI docs, embeddable widgets, and assistant-friendly data access for live stats.
Fiscal pressure
- Federal budget deficit tracker with revenue, outlays, and daily run-rate.
- Treasury snapshot separating public debt from intragovernmental holdings.
- Interest-cost comparison against defense, education, healthcare, and other major categories.
- Efficiency-savings tracker with contract, grant, lease, and recent-activity views.
- Trillion milestone countdown with recent intervals and estimated next crossing.
Household translation
- Debt per citizen, debt per taxpayer, and household-sized share cards.
- Tax receipt calculator estimating where a user's federal taxes go.
- Personal inflation loss calculator for any dollar amount and start year.
- Hedge-your-share calculator comparing cash, gold, silver, Bitcoin, and broad assets.
Global and historical context
- Who owns the debt: domestic investors, foreign holders, trust funds, and the Federal Reserve.
- Foreign-holder leaderboard with trendlines for Japan, China, the UK, and other large holders.
- Debt-to-GDP analysis, unfunded liabilities, and long-range projection scenarios.
- Trade balance, current account, and partner-country imbalance views.
- War-cost timeline, city debt rankings, state pages, and world debt comparisons.
Share and educate
Make every chart reusable.
Each major metric should support a share card, embed widget, glossary entry, FAQ answer, and data download so visitors can cite the number instead of screenshotting a wall of text.
Interactive next steps
Give visitors something useful before the full data backend exists.
These lightweight calculators turn the inspiration into working, clearly labeled tools: an inflation-loss estimator, a simple tax-receipt split, and a briefing signup mockup.
Inflation loss check
- Estimated buying-power gap
- $0
- Today's comparable amount
- $0
Mini tax receipt
- Estimated federal tax
- $0
- Interest slice
- $0
- Defense slice
- $0
Daily money briefing
Package the debt clock, inflation gap, interest meter, and key data updates into one concise email.
No submission is wired yet; this is a front-end placeholder for the product flow.Resource layer
The remaining reference ideas are now mapped to concrete on-page entry points.
This finishes the non-plagiarized coverage by adding places for methodology, exports, fullscreen viewing, share cards, analysis, discussion, and credibility signals.
Common questions
Quick answers people expect from a live money clock.
Is this clock official?
No. It is an illustrative projection. Production versions should connect to official Treasury, BLS, BEA, or Federal Reserve datasets and show the latest source date.
Why does debt per citizen matter?
It translates a giant federal number into a personal scale, making the burden easier to compare with income, taxes, rent, and savings.
What should be tracked next?
Useful additions include downloadable datasets, source methodology, debt by president, unfunded liabilities, and a full-screen embeddable clock.
Disclaimer
Figures on this initial static site are estimates and illustrative demonstrations unless explicitly sourced in future updates. They are not financial advice, official statistics, or real-time market data.