Friday, April 22, 2011

German hyperinflation

When Money Dies - back in printThe Nightmare of Deficit Spending, Devaluation, and Hyperinflation in Weimar Germany
This history of inflation in Weimar Germany is probably the most readable and riveting ever published. This is the reason this book, published first in 1975, is so legendary. The first generation that read it went wild and bought as many copies as were available. Then, mysteriously, it went out of print.
For years, copies fetched thousands of dollars on the used-book market. People were willing to pay. For those who couldn't afford it, there’s nothing like that kind of price tag to draw interest.
Somehow a publisher has finally managed to sort out a complex rights issue to bring it back into print.
The Mises Institute is interested because the author has a thoroughly Austrian take on the money issue here. And as a narrative of the wild events of the period, nothing else compares.
This was a time of bizarre parallels: amazing riches coinciding with terrible poverty, mass quantities of money coinciding with a shortage of money, mania and hysteria coinciding with mass depression, frenzied freedom coinciding with the rise of dictatorship. There is no better historical incident to illustrate what inflation does to society: it turns everything upside down. And the circumstances surrounding how it all occurred are eerily similar to our own today.
In short, you will find this book terrifying, gripping, educational, and extremely powerful.
Comment: Learn about the past in order to prepare for the future.

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