What Hyperinflation Looks Like
Sweeping up pengő banknotes. Hungary, 1946.
100 Billion Dollars buys eggs in Zimbabwe.
500 Billion Dinar note from Yugoslavia.
Burning marks as fuel to keep warm. Germany, 1913.
As I've previously noted, hyperinflationists are too focused on Weimar Germany:
You've heard how bad things were in the Weimar Republic, when people would rush straight to stores to buy food after receiving a pay check because their money would buy much less the next day.Postscript: This post is not implying that I think we'll necessarily get hyperinflation. It is only trying to put historical cases of hyperinflation in context.
But it turns out that Germany's hyperinflation in 1923 was nothing compared to that experienced by Hungary, Zimbabwe and Yugoslavia.In a new paper published by the Cato Institute, economics professor Steve Hanke lists the all-time worst episodes of hyperinflation:Note that Hungary's daily inflation rate was ten times greater than that in Weimar Germany, and prices doubled almost six times faster in Hungary than in the Weimar Republic.Life in Weimar Germany was extremely difficult. But Hungary in 1946 was a lot worse.Note: While the commonly accepted explanation for hyperinflation is government printing too much money, Ellen Brown argues that the real explanation is a concerted attack on a country's currency by foreign speculators and/or foreign governments.
Verbatim from Washington's blog, via zerohedge.com
What will you do with your federal reserve notes when people lose faith in them?
After the War Between the States, Confederate currency was taken in bulk to NY, and used as insulation in new houses going up. It is still found on occasion, brittle and weathered, lining the walls.
That's the fate of paper money backed only by promises.
Federal reserve notes are backed only by promises to print more paper.
try this; worthlesss dollar bills gathered up and expoxied into layers of a ten million dollar hull of your new sailboat!
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Wildflower
Not as soft as Charmin, but it is quality paper and should work much better than corn cobs or phonebook pages.
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