A browser cache "caches" (as in keeps local copies) of data downloaded from the internet. The next time your browser needs the same data it can get it from the cache (fast) instead of downloading it over the internet (slow)
The problem is that data can be old. For example imagine the browser cached www.nytimes.com today and 24hrs later you visited www.nytimes.com again. If the browser loaded the cached data it would be old news.
So there are headers (metadata) that the servers send to browser telling them how long they should cache something (if at all).
The data the browser generally caches are "requests" which. In other words if your browser asks for "http://foo.com/bar.html" the first time the browser will "request" that "foo.com" send it "bar.html". If the headers from "foo.com" are set a certain way the browser will the save a local copy of "bar.html". If you request the same thing again the browser may load "bar.html" from it's cache. I say "may" because it depends on the headers sent from the server. The server can say how long (say 10 minutes, 10 hours, 10 days, etc..) or it can say "don't cache this at all, always download the newest version".
If you go to your browser's dev tools (chrome shown below) and look at the network tab (not sure what it's called in other browsers). Load the page again and you can see all the requests. You'll also notice which ones were loaded from the cache
If you click on a request you can see the metadata from both the browser (request headers) and the server (response headers)
The reason clearing the cache often fixes things is if for some reason the server (a bug?) said it was ok to cache or used the cached version but the data on the server has actually been updated. The browser, doing what the server told it to do, is using its copy from the cache, not the newer version which is actually needed. There might also from time to time be bugs in the browser itself related to caching.
When everything is working correctly it's great but if one thing or another is mis-configured or sending the wrong headers then the browser can end up loading old data from the cache instead of downloading the newest data. Clearing your cache effectively forces the browser to download the data again.
You can find out the details of what the various headers do here.