Real-life inflation (so daily expenses) in at least a large part of the western world is now around 20% to 30% indeed. I second floobydust for my case, it's jumped between +20% to +30%.
As I've said before...
I'm no economist but I believe this is just the overall economic system correcting itself after decades of artificial manipulation. As the old saying goes, "You cannot fool Mother Nature". You cannot inject gobs of fresh currency into the economy and NOT have inflation. Like the Second Law of Thermodynamics, you may be able to make things
appear different for a while but the fundamentals
always assert themselves eventually.
Speaking for the USA, we injected gobs of money into the system back in the 2008-2009 "Great Recession" period yet the Fed held rates down to prevent prices from reacting normally. I bet someone somewhere thought that would be a short-term action, but no politician wants to be in office when the piper must be paid so they simply maintained the fiction! Thus for 12+ years we've been kicking that can down the road.
Then along comes COVID-19, and the novel, unique, unprecedented "solution" is... wait for it... print more money! And it appears that this, at last, has reached the breaking point. The fiction can no longer be maintained. All that pent-up correction, those years of artificial conditions, are asserting themselves. The fundamental fact is we've dramatically increased the number of dollars in the system. By definition each individual dollar must be worth less as a result. I'm not talking zero-sum game here - even as the economy has grown, the growth in the number of dollars has far outstripped it. It's not the absolute number of dollars, it's the ratio of dollars to the size of the economy. The politicians have played games with the numbers so much, for so long, that it may finally be escaping their ability to manipulate things.
What I don't know is the proper response for "the little people" like me and (I presume) most of the participants here. If you know inflation is getting worse, holding currency is obviously the wrong way to protect your wealth. But what hard assets are a good alternative? Real estate is obviously in a huge bubble so "buying at the peak" is an awful way to preserve your asset base. Just play the stock and bond market? Buy up canned goods and ammunition? I really don't know. But what I do suspect is that what we're seeing here is a long overdue reaction/correction to an economically unwarranted flood of fresh dollars into the economy. Unless they pull those dollars back out of the economy, the market will revalue each individual dollar to compensate.