Skip to main content
Calkulon

How to Calculate Greedflation Price Check

What is Greedflation Price Check?

The Greedflation Price Check Calculator compares current product prices to inflation-adjusted reference prices to identify excess increases attributable to corporate profit margins rather than input costs. Inflation-adjusted price = old price × (1 + inflation rate)^years. Anything above is potential greedflation. Useful for consumers, journalists, and policy analysts.

Formula

Inflation-Adjusted = Old Price × (1 + Inflation)^Years; Excess = Current − Inflation-Adjusted
r
Inflation Rate (%/year) — Annual inflation rate

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1Enter old reference price
  2. 2Enter current price
  3. 3Enter inflation rate (BLS CPI) and years passed
  4. 4Calculator computes inflation-adjusted price, actual increase, and excess
  5. 5Labels result as Normal Inflation or Likely Greedflation

Worked Examples

Input
$3 (2020) → $5.50 (2024), 5% inflation, 4 years
Result
Inflation-adjusted: $3.65, Excess: $1.85 = Likely greedflation

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Using wrong inflation period (cumulative vs annual)
  • Ignoring input cost shocks (oil, supply chain)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is greedflation real or just inflation?

Corporate profit margins reached multi-decade highs 2021-2023. FTC studies confirm pricing power, not just costs, drove ~50% of price increases in concentrated industries.

Ready to calculate? Try the free Greedflation Price Check Calculator

Try it yourself →

Settings

PrivacyTermsAbout© 2026 Calkulon