Does a Livret A really protect against inflation?
Not always. A Livret A protects your balance in euros: your nominal capital does not fall, the money stays available and the interest is tax-free. But it protects your purchasing power only if its net rate is higher than inflation. If the Livret A pays 1.5% while prices rise by 2.8%, your bank balance increases but your real value falls by about 1.26%.
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Explanation
The trap is confusing the displayed balance with the real value of money.
A Livret A is safe in nominal terms: you do not see your balance fall like with a risky investment. Its interest is also exempt from income tax and social contributions. That makes it a strong tool for emergency savings: available money, simple rules, clear operation and no taxation.
But inflation works elsewhere: it raises the price of goods and services. If your Livret A earns less than prices rise, you have more euros than before, but each euro buys a little less.
So the key comparison is the net Livret A rate versus the inflation rate:
- if the Livret A rate is higher than inflation, your purchasing power increases;
- if it matches inflation, your purchasing power is broadly preserved;
- if it is lower than inflation, your purchasing power decreases.
The Livret A is still useful, but it should not be asked to do what it is not built for: beating inflation over the long term. Its main role is to hold safe, available savings, not to build long-term returns.
Concrete example
Simple example with €10,000 saved for one year:
- Livret A rate: 1.5%;
- inflation: 2.8%;
- displayed balance after interest: €10,150;
- real value in today’s euros: about €9,874.
Result: despite €150 of interest, real purchasing power falls by about €126. That is the invisible loss: the balance rises, but buying power falls.
Common mistake
The common mistake is looking only at the interest earned. A 1.5% Livret A rate looks positive, but if inflation is 2.8%, the real return is negative. Another trap is comparing the Livret A with a gross bank savings account. The Livret A is tax-free, while standard savings accounts may be taxed, often through the 30% flat tax in France.
Sources & methodology
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