Friday, March 13, 2026

256. COVID Taught Us One Financial Truth Many People Forgot



When the World Stopped: The COVID Lockdown Lesson


Imagine someone in early 2020.

He had a decent job. A regular paycheck. Bills were manageable. Life felt stable.

Then the lockdowns came.

Businesses closed. Offices shut down. Transportation stopped. Entire industries froze almost overnight. The COVID-19 pandemic triggered one of the largest global economic crises in more than a century, disrupting livelihoods and causing widespread job losses around the world.

Suddenly, the monthly salary disappeared.

At first, the assumption was simple: This will pass in a few weeks.

But weeks became months.

Without savings, the pressure slowly intensified.

    • Rent was due.
    • Groceries still had to be bought.
    • Utilities did not stop billing.

For someone with no emergency fund, every day of lockdown became a financial stress test.

That moment taught a harsh but unforgettable lesson:

Income is temporary. Expenses are permanent.

Those who had three to six months of savings endured the crisis with anxiety but stability. Those without savings experienced something far more painful: financial vulnerability.

And once you experience that feeling, you never look at savings the same way again.


The Lesson Returning Today: Inflation and Global Conflict

Fast forward to today.

The challenge is different, but the lesson is the same.

Around the world, geopolitical tensions—particularly the escalating conflict involving Iran—have disrupted energy markets and pushed oil prices sharply upward.

Oil prices have surged past $100 per barrel as supply disruptions ripple through global markets, fueling higher fuel costs and broader inflation fears.

When energy prices rise, everything follows.

    • Transportation becomes more expensive.
    • Food prices climb.
    • Electricity costs increase.
    • Businesses pass higher costs to consumers.

For families already living paycheck to paycheck, this becomes another painful financial lesson.

A person without savings now faces a different kind of crisis.

    • Not unemployment.
    • But shrinking purchasing power.

The same salary that once paid the bills now barely stretches far enough.

Suddenly, everyday questions appear:

    • Should we cut back on groceries?
    • Should we delay paying certain bills?
    • Should we borrow just to get through the month?

And once again, the same truth emerges:

Financial resilience is not built during good times. It is revealed during difficult times.


Why Difficult Times Teach the Best Financial Lessons

Hard times strip away illusions.

When the economy is strong and money flows easily, many people believe stability is permanent.

But crises—whether pandemics, recessions, or wars—remind us of several timeless financial truths.

1. Income Can Stop Overnight

    • Jobs feel permanent until they are not.
    • COVID proved that entire industries can shut down in weeks.

2. Savings Is Not Optional

    • Savings is not idle money.
    • It is time—time to breathe, think, and recover during uncertainty.

3. Debt Becomes Heavier in Crisis

Debt that feels manageable during stable times becomes oppressive when income falls or prices rise.

4. Global Events Reach Your Kitchen Table

    • A conflict thousands of kilometers away can still affect the price of rice, gasoline, and electricity.
    • The world is more connected than most people realize.


The Quiet Power of Financial Preparedness

History repeats this pattern.

Every generation faces its own financial shock.
    • The oil crises of the 1970s
    • The Asian Financial Crisis
    • The Global Financial Crisis of 2008
    • The COVID pandemic
    • Inflation shocks triggered by geopolitical conflicts
Each crisis teaches the same lesson to those willing to listen:

Financial security is not about how much you earn.

It is about how prepared you are when life becomes uncertain.

The Lesson Worth Remembering
  • No one wants hardship.
  • No one wishes for pandemics, wars, or economic shocks.
  • But these moments do something important.
  • They reveal the difference between living comfortably and living securely.

The person who endured lockdown without savings will never again underestimate the value of an emergency fund.

The person struggling today with rising prices will begin to understand the importance of financial buffers.

Because sometimes, the lessons that shape our financial lives are learned not in times of prosperity, but in moments when we have no choice but to learn them.

And once learned, those lessons stay with us for the rest of our lives.

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