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3 posts on "hyperinflation"
July 13, 2023

Inflating Away the Debt: The Debt‑Inflation Channel of German Hyperinflation

Photo: In the money delivery office of the Reichsbank in Berlin: table full of money notes with men looking over. Sign says Rauchen verboten, October 1923; source: Wikimedia.

The recent rise in price pressures around the world has reignited interest in understanding how inflation transmits to the real economy. Economists have long recognized that unexpected surges of inflation can redistribute wealth from creditors to debtors when debt contracts are written in nominal terms (see, for example, Fisher 1933). If debtors are financially constrained, this redistribution can affect real economic activity by relaxing financing constraints. This mechanism, which we call the debt-inflation channel, is well understood theoretically (for example, Gomes, Jermann, and Schmid 2016), but there is limited empirical evidence to substantiate it. In this post, we discuss new insights from one of the key events in monetary history: the Great German Inflation of 1919-23. Because this case of inflation was both surprising and extremely high, Germany’s experience helps shed light on how high inflation impacts firms’ economic activity through the erosion of their nominal debt burdens. These insights are based on a recently released research paper.

November 7, 2014

Historical Echoes: A Stitch in Time Saves You from Carrying Around Worthless Money

Lauren DiCioccio, a mixed media artist, sews (in the sense of embroiders) money.

Posted at 7:00 am in Historical Echoes | Permalink
July 11, 2014

Crisis Chronicles: The Collapse of the French Assignat and Its Link to Virtual Currencies Today

In the late 1700s, France ran a persistent deficit and by the late 1780s struggled with how to balance the budget and pay down the debt.

Posted at 7:00 am in Crisis, Exchange Rates, Exports | Permalink | Comments (2)
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