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GlynYes, inflation is the rate at which currency loses value. But if the nominal value of an asset changes at a rate different to the inflation rate, then implicitly, the existence of inflation changes that something's "value". If a house keeps a nominal constant value of £100k over a period when inflation doubles, then its real value has halved.
Glyn1) I might be misunderstanding you, but a house doesn't have a fixed, intrinsic value. In the limit, if a virus killed everyone on earth, houses are useless and worthless. (For a more realistic example, see Detroit.)2) But that's just an academic indulgence. We were talking about the monetary value. At least I was. The intrinsic "worth" of a house is entirely irrelevant to the discussion of the monetary value of a house to someone's financial wealth.
They have let cheap chinese steel be imported into the country, at a cost that puts our factories out of business.