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    When Money Dies: The Nightmare of Deficit Spending, Devaluation, and Hyperinflation in Weimar Germany

    When Money Dies: The Nightmare of Deficit Spending, Devaluation, and Hyperinflation in Weimar Germany

    3.9 17

    by Adam Fergusson


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      ISBN-13: 9781586489953
    • Publisher: PublicAffairs
    • Publication date: 10/12/2010
    • Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 288
    • Sales rank: 157,375
    • File size: 419 KB

    Table of Contents

    Note to the 2010 edition vii

    Prologue ix

    1 Gold for Iron 1

    2 Joyless Streets 17

    3 The Bill Presented 27

    4 Delirium of Milliards 39

    5 The Slide to Hyperinglation 61

    6 Summer of'22 80

    7 The Hapsburg Inheritance 92

    8 Autumn Paper-chase 108

    9 Ruhrkampf 129

    10 Summer of'23 158

    11 Havenstein 170

    12 The Bottom of the Abyss 186

    13 Schacht 205

    14 Unemployment Breaks Out 218

    15 The Wounds are Bared 233

    Epilogue 248

    Acknowledgments 257

    Bibliography 259

    Index 261

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    When Money Dies is the classic history of what happens when a nation’s currency depreciates beyond recovery. In 1923, with its currency effectively worthless (the exchange rate in December of that year was one dollar to 4,200,000,000,000 marks), the German republic was all but reduced to a barter economy. Expensive cigars, artworks, and jewels were routinely exchanged for staples such as bread; a cinema ticket could be bought for a lump of coal; and a bottle of paraffin for a silk shirt. People watched helplessly as their life savings disappeared and their loved ones starved. Germany’s finances descended into chaos, with severe social unrest in its wake.

    Money may no longer be physically printed and distributed in the voluminous quantities of 1923. However, “quantitative easing,” that modern euphemism for surreptitious deficit financing in an electronic era, can no less become an assault on monetary discipline. Whatever the reason for a country’s deficit—necessity or profligacy, unwillingness to tax or blindness to expenditure—it is beguiling to suppose that if the day of reckoning is postponed economic recovery will come in time to prevent higher unemployment or deeper recession. What if it does not? Germany in 1923 provides a vivid, compelling, sobering moral tale.

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    From the Publisher
    Daily Express (London)
    “Engrossing and sobering.”

    Allen Mattich, Wall Street Journal, October 1, 2010
    “One of the most blood chilling economics books I’ve ever read.”

    Wall Street Journal, January 30, 2011
    “Every body ought to read this book. But baby boomers must.”

    The Guardian
    ”a brilliant account of how Germany's Weimar Republic was consumed by hyperinflation.

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