Analysis of News—www.analysis-news.com
Of Interest to Investors, Survivalists and Others Concerned
About Their
Economic and
Financial Futures
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
With
a focus on the Plutocrats, Goldsmiths, Super-Rich Insiders, and their Allies
and
what they are conspiratorially doing to
manipulate the financial markets, make more
profits, rip us off and install a world government under
their control
The Goldsmiths—Part LIX
By R. D. Bradshaw
Since there is some concern over
the prospects for hyperinflation in the US, in the sense of what happened in
Germany’s Weimar’s Republic in the early 1920s, this Goldsmiths will broach
that theme.
Wikipedia’s article on
hyperinflation gives us this definition of hyperinflation: “In economics, hyperinflation is inflation that is very high or ‘out of control’,
a condition in which prices increase rapidly as a currency loses its value.
Definitions used by the media vary from a cumulative inflation rate over three
years approaching 100% to ‘inflation exceeding 50% a month.’ In informal usage the term is often applied to
much lower rates. As a rule of thumb, normal inflation is reported per year,
but hyperinflation is often reported for much shorter intervals, often per
month.
“The definition used by most economists is ‘an
inflationary cycle without any tendency toward equilibrium.’ A vicious circle
is created in which more and more inflation is created with each iteration of
the cycle. Although there is a great deal of debate about the root causes of
hyperinflation, it becomes visible when there is an unchecked increase in the money
supply (or drastic debasement of coinage) usually accompanied by a widespread
unwillingness to hold the money for more than the time needed to trade it for
something tangible to avoid further loss. Hyperinflation is often associated
with wars (or their aftermath), economic depressions, and political or social
upheaval.”
Going on, Wikipedia adds: “The main cause of hyperinflation is a
massive and rapid increase in the amount of money, which is not supported by
growth in the output of goods and services. This results in an imbalance
between the supply and demand for the money (including currency and bank
deposits), accompanied by a complete loss of confidence in the money, similar
to a bank run.
“Enactment of legal tender laws
and price controls to prevent discounting the value of paper money relative to
gold, silver, hard currency, or commodities, fails to force acceptance of a
paper money which lacks intrinsic value. If the entity responsible for printing a
currency promotes excessive money printing, with other factors contributing a
reinforcing effect, hyperinflation usually continues. Often the body responsible for printing the
currency cannot physically print paper currency faster than the rate at which
it is devaluing, thus neutralizing their attempts to stimulate the economy.
“Hyperinflation is generally associated with paper
money because this can easily be used to increase the money supply: add more
zeros to the plates and print, or even stamp old notes with new numbers.
Historically there have been numerous episodes of hyperinflation in various
countries, followed by a return to ‘hard money’. Older economies would revert
to hard currency and barter when the circulating medium became excessively devalued,
generally following a ‘run’ on the store of value.
“Hyperinflation effectively wipes out the purchasing
power of private and public savings, distorts the economy in favor of extreme
consumption and hoarding of real assets, causes the monetary base, whether specie
or hard currency, to flee the country, and makes the afflicted area anathema to
investment.”
This definition and explanation
brings up a couple of points worth remembering.
First, hyperinflation causes a destruction of savings. And second, hyperinflation usually predicates
a return to hard money and in older economies, barter. I first mentioned these coming eventualities
in the Goldsmiths, published in the fall of 2008—like for an eventual currency
which could be partially gold backed.
The Goldsmiths, Parts XII and XXIII, specifically mentioned the
likelihood of bartering in the future.
The
Weimar Republic’s Bout with Inflation
Socyberty.com had an article on
hyperinflation which specifically addressed the situation in Weimar Germany in
the years 1921-1923. It noted: “The main factor in the hyperinflation,
however, were the reparations payments that the Allies demanded of the Germans
as part of the Versailles treaty. This
treaty demanded that Germany accept full responsibility for World War One and
that it pay for the entire cost of the war. In 1921, the Allies set the sum to be paid at
about 31.4 billion dollars. This was considerably more than the gross domestic
product of the entire country.”
This backdrop set the stage for
the German government to renege on the payments. Thereupon, the French and Belgians occupied
the Ruhr industrial area to seize what resources they could. The workers there began a general
strike.
The
Socyberty.com article went on to the fall out from the trouble in the Ruhr by
noting that it: “brought the German economy to a standstill. Factories around
the country had to shut down because they were not getting the materials they
needed from the Ruhr region. At the same time, the German government still
(had) numerous responsibilities that it was obliged to meet, such as army
pensions and unemployment insurance.
“The
effect that all of this instability had on the German economy is astounding.
From January 1919 to January 1922, the German Mark fell from 8.9 to 191.8 to
the US Dollar. By June of 1922, the Mark had fallen to 350 per USD and by
October of that year, it was 4,500 per USD. Between January and November of
1923, the value dropped from 18,000 per USD to 4.2 TRILLION per USD.
“Obviously,
this hyperinflation devastated the German economy. Life savings became
worthless and loans were essentially wiped out. It got so bad, that workers
began demanding that they be paid twice per day, because their wages would
otherwise be rendered worthless by the time they got off work. People had to
barter for goods and used their currency as wallpaper and fuel for fires
because it was more valuable as those things than as money.”
The Stabilization
Effort
In late 1922, the German central
bank tried to stabilize the falling mark by supporting it by buying up the
worthless marks with gold and foreign exchange.
But this effort soon fell by the wayside as the inflation continued to
expand rapidly.
An excellent article by USA Gold on “Nightmare German
inflation” told what happened with the exploding hyperinflation and the
inability of the German government to contain it: “Businessmen began to abandon their
legitimate occupations to speculate in stocks and in goods. Thousands of small
businessmen tried to eke out a living by speculating in fabrics, shoes, meat,
soap, and clothing--in any produce they could obtain. Each fall in the mark
brought a rush to the shops. People bought dozens of hats or sweaters.”
As the trouble continued, workers were being paid two
or three times a day. Wives would meet their husbands, take the money, rush to the
shops and buy goods. But, by this time, shops were often empty. Storekeepers
could not obtain goods nor do business fast enough to protect their cash
receipts. Farmers refused to bring produce into the city in return for
worthless money. Food riots broke out. Workers marched into the countryside to
dig up vegetables and to loot farms. Businesses started to close down. The
German economy began collapsing in earnest.
In time, middle-class people, who depended on any
sort of fixed income, found themselves destitute. They had to sell furniture, clothing,
jewelry and works of art to buy food. Small shops filled up with such
merchandise. Hospitals, literary and art
societies, charitable and religious institutions closed down as their funds
disappeared.
USA Gold says that the tax system virtually broke
down. Businessmen found that by merely delaying tax payments, the depreciation
in the mark would almost eliminate their true value. But the government,
lacking needed income, was forced to resort more and more to creating money. By October 1923, per USA Gold, 1% of
government income came from taxes and 99% from the creation of new money.
Yet the main force which gave inflation its momentum
was the steady decrease in the true value of German money in circulation. Despite the proliferating billions and trillions
of marks, the average German found it harder and harder to get enough money for
necessities. Banks, short of money, could not honor checks. Businessmen found it hard to find the money
needed to buy materials and meet payrolls. The German government also faced the
same problem. It seemed that there was
not too much money around, but rather much too little. The need for more and
more money grew on all sides.
Humor
from Weimar Germany
This backdrop on German inflation
reminds me of a story from Germany in the 1920s while Germany was facing its
hyperinflation crisis. I told this story
in my presentation on Editor’s Personal on the right menu of www.analysis-news.com. But it is a good one so I will repeat it
here.
Per the story, inflation was so
bad that working people had to be paid frequently by their employers (as
described in the above comments). Once
being paid, the typical German worker would rush home and give his money to his
wife to run out to the local food markets and buy some food. To delay spending one’s money meant that the
money would depreciate so fast that its ability to purchase food could be
destroyed by waiting another day to spend the money.
So one working German man got his
pay one day and he rushed home and gave it to his wife so she could go to the
store and buy a loaf of bread. There
were so many billions of marks needed to buy a loaf of bread that the poor
woman could not carry them to the store.
So she put them in a wheelbarrow and pushed it down to the store to get
her bread.
But when she got to the store, she
found that she could not get the wheelbarrow, filled with marks, through the
store’s door. She thought for a minute
and decided to park the money-filled wheelbarrow at the door and go in, get her
bread and have the store owner come out to the wheelbarrow to retrieve his
billions of marks.
As planned, she got her bread and
the owner agreed to come to the door to get his money. And sure enough, disaster had struck. Here, someone may conclude that some thief
found the waiting wheelbarrow full of money and stole the money before the
store owner could take possession of it for the loaf of bread. But guess what? It didn’t happen that way at all.
On coming out the door, the woman
and store owner found that a thief had indeed struck—but not the way one would
first guess. Instead, they found the
billions of marks scattered all over the sidewalk. So the thief didn’t steal the money. Instead the culprit dumped the marks on the
sidewalk and stole the wheelbarrow.
The
Fallout of the German Hyperinflation
The hyperinflation was disastrous for paper currency
and paper assets like bonds. Some stocks
survived but many became worthless. Real
estate was mixed as it ultimately fell sharply in value.
USA Gold today gives this perspective on some of the
best investments of all during this hyperinflationary period: “Capital was preserved by those who early changed it into
objects of lasting value--rare coins, stamps, jewelry, works of art, antiques--or
into merchandise such as clothing, fabrics, etc. Of course, most people did not understand the
advantage of accumulating such property until the inflation was well along. By
that time the prices of all goods had risen so much that they seemed
outrageously bad bargains. In the event, however, cash proved an even worse
bargain…
“Those
who held funds in dollars, pounds or other stable currencies, or in gold, saved their
capital. The government set up rigid exchange controls as the inflation proceeded. As usual under such
conditions, a black market flourished. The
ones who fared best were the small minority who had the foresight to exchange
marks into foreign money or gold very early, before new laws made this
difficult and before the mark lost too much value.”
Stabilization
in late 1923
In November 1923, the German
government started a currency reform with the creation of the Rentenbank which
began issuing a new currency called the Rentenmark. Each new Rentenmark was valued at one trillion
of the old inflated marks. Soon, the government
was able to stabilize its monetary system and the hyperinflation ended.
While there were several fallouts
of the introduction of the new Rentenmarks, perhaps it offered two features
which somehow caught on to promote public acceptance and stability. As the USA Gold article noted, the new money
restored confidence.
By August 1924, the government
introduced a new Reichsmark which was equal in value to the Rentenmark on a one
for one basis. And importantly, the new
Reichsmark had a 30% gold backing which made it even more attractive.
But
There Were some Bad Fallouts by the time of Stabilization
Perhaps the worst fall out of the German
bout with hyperinflation is that millions of middle class Germans were wiped
out financially and economically. Discontent
and dissatisfaction spread. A serious
depression followed with much unemployment, fear and apprehension. The loss of confidence in the German money
during the days of the hyperinflation was somewhat solved. But there was thereafter a loss of confidence
in the government and economy as a whole.
Thus, even middle class people,
who would not normally be attracted to radical politics, soon found themselves
receptive to ideology which they normally would have rejected. The ruling democratic parties and philosophy
soon became discredited and rejected by large numbers of people.
Yes, despite the supposed stabilization
in its money by 1924, other serious problems surfaced because of the loss of
the German middle class. Thereupon,
radical political movements like Communism and Nazism began capturing followers
and causing great social and political unrest.
The former stable country of Germany, with its respect for law and order,
soon found itself propelled into regular street fights and conflicts between
the different radical factions. Turmoil
prevailed in many German cities.
The loss of the German middle
class (which was mostly reduced to poverty and low income levels) set the stage
for the rise of Adolf Schicklgruber (who used the alias Hitler to better fool
and deceive the German people about his real identity).
The
Bottom Line
With
this backdrop from Weimar Germany, perhaps the next question is what about the
US? Can we learn from history? The turmoil in Germany in the 1920s and early
1930s manifestly brought on the dictatorship of Adolf Schicklgruber. As a minimum, Adolf came to power to restore
law and order.
And
he did so by imposing a totalitarian state and the abolishment of personal
liberties. Once in power, he not only
persecuted certain groups but he brought on a confiscation of guns and gold
(the Nazi quest for gold was so great that gold tooth fillings were robbed from
the dead).
With
hyperinflation staring America in the face, and with its accompanying trouble
and turmoil, is it conceivable that we will have a new Adolf Schicklgruber take
over here to restore prosperity, law and order?
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Back issues of
the Goldsmiths, by the editor of the Analysis of News, can be accessed from a
Google or Yahoo search engine by typing in “R. D. Bradshaw” Goldsmiths. Several hundred web sites can be found with
the back issues and with translations to Spanish, Italian, German, Chinese and
other foreign languages. Goldseek.com
has most of the back issues of the Goldsmiths.
Finally, the “Archives-Goldsmiths” of this website (www.analysis-news.com ) has all of the
Goldsmith articles issued to date.
Besides the
revelations contained in the Goldsmiths’ articles, the work of the plutocratic
financial market manipulators to conspiratorially manipulate and control the
financial markets (to make more profits and install a world government under
their management) is also addressed at length in the periodic analysis of the
news and in other articles produced at www.analysis-news.com. This website has an article of interest to
any person interested in understanding the market Manipulators. It is the Hidden Secret of the Manipulators,
why they succeed and how to follow their manipulations.
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