Yeah, I get what you mean, and I think that's why this topic has a lot of impact. A lot of people don't care what the headline number says if their weekly costs keep climbing. Food, rent, cars, housing, insurance, all of that feels way more real than a broad inflation average. At the same time, I wouldn't say the number is always fake, but I do think it can feel incomplete. CPI is meant to measure a general average, not the pressure people feel in the areas that hurt most, and when essentials rise faster than everything else, people naturally feel like real inflation is much higher than the official figure. That's also why food matters so much in this conversation, because people buy food constantly. A drop in tech prices might look nice in a report, but it does not ease the pressure of groceries, fuel, or housing showing up week after week, so maybe the bigger issue is this, official inflation may describe the economy on paper, but lived inflation describes what people actually go through, and right now, that gap feels too big for a lot of people to ignore.
It's only really this week that the last oil tankers from before the crisis have arrived at their destination. It's going to start getting a whole lot worse from now as the war drags on. Even if the pointless war were to end tomorrow, Israel has attacked a lot of the Iranian supply chain which means the oil they were sending to places like Asia and China will not start up again quickly. Even other countries like Saudi had to block up their wells because they ran out of storage space, which makes them hard to get going again. All this is going to have the effect of pushing the coats or everything up substantially as the world competes for less resources, with the richest countries usually able to absorb the higher prices more easily as the poorer countries suffer.
Yeah, A lot of people look at the first shock and think the worst is already priced in, but supply problems usually hit harder with time, once older shipments clear out, the market has to deal with the real disruption, and that is when prices can start rising more sharply. When less oil is available, or when restarting supply takes time, richer countries can usually keep buying, while poorer countries get squeezed much faster. Fuel goes up, transport gets more expensive, food costs rise, and basic living becomes harder, especially in places that already have less room to absorb shocks, even if the war ended quickly, the after effects would not disappear overnight.