Venezuela is consumed by hyperinflation because they
over-borrowed, blew the money on socialist programs, ran out of cash and
defaulted on their $50 billion in bonds and loans.
Venezuela's Inflation Breaches 25,000%, by Steve Hankehttps://www.forbes.com/sites/stevehanke/2018/05/31/venezuelas-inflation-breaches-25000/#5a7796476d57 There have been 55 cases of countries
who have ignited hyperinflation in the recent past. How 9 Countries Saw Inflation Evolve Into Hyperinflation,
by Matthew Boesler, 10/5/13
Venezuela's Inflation Breaches 25,000%, by Steve Hankehttps://www.forbes.com/sites/stevehanke/2018/05/31/venezuelas-inflation-breaches-25000/#5a7796476d57
Hyperinflationary
episodes have appeared several times over the past century - 55,
to be exact -
as the world's nations have experimented with fiat currencies backed by the
full faith and credit of the governments that issue them.
At
times, that full faith and credit has been misplaced - and holders
of unstable currencies have been caught empty-handed in countries all over the
world.
Often,
this is can be a recurring theme among developing nations like those in Latin
America during the debt crisis that struck the region in
the 1980s.
Even
some of the largest economies in the world today, though - like China, Germany,
and France - have suffered devastating hyperinflationary episodes.
A
major historical precursor of hyperinflation is war that destroys the capital
stock of an economy and dramatically reduces output - but the misplaced
monetary and fiscal policies that ensue are almost always part of the story.
Economists
Steve Hanke and Nicholas Krus compiled data on all 56 recorded hyperinflations in a 2012 study. We summarize 9 of the worst episodes
here.
Hungary: August 1945 - July 1946 - flickr / Zoli Erdos
Daily inflation rate: 207 percent - Prices doubled every: 15 hours - Story: Hungary was economically
devastated by WWII. Owing to its unfortunate status as a warzone, estimates
indicate 40 percent of Hungary's capital stock was destroyed in the conflict.
Before this, it had engaged in a wild, debt-fueled ramp up in production to
support the German war effort, but Germany never paid for the goods.
When
Hungary signed a peace treaty with the Allies in 1945, it was ordered to pay
the Soviets massive reparations, which accounted for 25-50 percent of Hungary's
budget during its hyperinflationary episode. Meanwhile, the country's monetary
policy was essentially co-opted by the Allied Control Commission.
Hungarian
central bankers warned that printing money to pay the bills would not end well,
but "the Soviets, who dominated the Commission, turned a deaf ear to these
warnings, which led some to conclude that the hyperinflation was designed to
achieve a political objective-the destruction of the middle class"
(Bomberger and Makinen 1983).
Sources: Hanke and Crus (2012), Bomberger and Makinen (1983).
Zimbabwe: March 2007 - November 2008- flickr / Peat Bakke
Daily inflation rate: 98 percent - Prices doubled every: 25 hours. Story: Zimbabwe's hyperinflation was
preceded by a long, grinding decline in economic output that followed Robert
Mugabe's land reforms of 2000-2001, through which land was expropriated largely
from white farmers and redistributed to the majority black populace. This led
to a 50 percent collapse in output over the next nine years.
Socialist
reforms and a costly involvement in Congo's civil war led to outsized
government budget deficits. At the same time, the Zimbabwean population was
declining as people fled the country. These two opposing factors of increased
government spending and a decreasing tax base caused the government to resort
to monetization of its fiscal deficit.
Sources: Hanke and Crus (2012), Koech (2011).
Yugoslavia/Republika Srpska: April 1992 - January 1994 -
Prices doubled every: 34 hours. Story: The fall of the Soviet Union led
to a decreased international role for Yugoslavia -formerly a key geopolitical
player connecting East and West - and its ruling Communist party eventually
came under the same pressure as the Soviets did. This led to a breakup of
Yugoslavia into several countries along ethnic lines and subsequent wars over
the following years as the newly-formed political entities sorted out their
independence.
In
the process, trade among regions of the former Yugoslavia collapsed, and
industrial output followed. At the same time, an international embargo was
placed on Yugoslavian exports, which further crushed output.
Petrovic,
Bogetic, and Vujosevic (1998) explain that the newly-formed Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia, in contrast with other states that broke away like Serbia and
Croatia, retained much of the bloated bureaucracy that existed before the split,
contributing to the federal deficit. In an attempt to monetize this and other deficits, the
central bank lost control of money creation and caused hyperinflation.
Weimar Germany: August 1922 - December 1923 - flickr / Comrade Foot. Daily inflation rate: 21 percent. Prices doubled every: 3 days, 17 hours. Story: The hyperinflation experienced in
Weimar Germany in the early 1920s followed its defeat in World War One a few
years earlier. As a result of the war, Germany was required to pay large
reparations to the victors to make up for the costs incurred by the winning
side.
However,
Germany was not allowed to pay the reparations with its currency at the time,
the Papiermark, which had already weakened significantly during the war on
account of the fact that Germany financed its war effort entirely through
borrowed funds.
In
order to pay the reparations in a currency other than the Papiermark, Weimar
Germany was forced to sell large amounts of the mark in exchange for a foreign
currencies that were eligible as payments. When the payments came due in the
summer of 1921, a policy of selling the mark to buy foreign currencies at any
price led to runaway hyperinflation as the mark was severely devalued.
Sources: Hanke and Crus (2012), Fergusson (1975).
Greece: May 1941 - December 1945. flickr / Tilemahos.
Daily inflation rate: 18 percent. Prices doubled every: 4 days, 6 hours. Story: Greece's fiscal budget balance swung
from a 271-million drachma surplus in 1939 to a 790-million drachma deficit in
1940 due to the onset of World War Two (foreign trade fell dramatically). This
set the stage for an already-deteriorating fiscal position by the time Greece
was invaded by the Axis powers at the end of 1940.
The
additional costs on Greece imposed by the "puppet government" of Axis
powers that controlled the country during its occupation included supporting
400,000 Axis soldiers stationed there and a big indemnity owed to the
occupiers.
Furthermore,
national income in Greece was slashed from 67.4 billion drachma in 1938 to 20
billion drachma by 1942. As tax revenues plummeted, Greece resorted to
monetization at the central bank to pay the aforementioned expenditures and
finance the rest of its deficit.
Sources: Hanke and Crus (2012), Makinen (1986).
China: October 1947 - May 1949. Wikimedia Commons.
Daily inflation rate: 14 percent. Prices doubled every: 5 days, 8 hours. Story: After World War Two, China was
divided by civil war. Nationalists and Communists battled for control of the
country and introduced competing currencies in the process, leaving China's
monetary system fragmented among ten major mediums of exchange in 1948.
Currency
took center stage at times during the conflict - Campbell and Tullock (1954)
explained that the three governments (including the Japanese occupiers) engaged
in "monetary warfare" by attempting to undermine opposing currencies
in various ways.
To
fund the conflict, the Nationalists resorted to running huge budget deficits,
which they eventually looked to cover by printing money, leading to runaway
hyperinflation. (this was preceded by abandonment of the silver standard in
China in 1935). They even got the Taiwanese central bank involved with the
monetization scheme, which caused hyperinflation in Taiwan as well. Sources: Hanke and Crus (2012), Fergusson (1975).
Peru: July 1990 - August 1990. Wikimedia Commons. Daily inflation rate: 5 percent. Prices doubled every: 13 days, 2 hours. Story: Peru had a long battle with inflation in
the latter half of the 20th century. During the first half of the 1980s,
Fernando Belaunde Terry was president, and Peru was faced with austerity
policies imposed by IMF lenders following the Latin American financial crisis
that began early in the decade.
Economist
Thayer Watkins says the Belaunde Terry administration gave the appearance that
it was complying with the reforms recommended by the IMF, when in reality, it
was not. The economy was suffering stagflation at the time, and it was blamed
on IMF austerity policies by the electorate, even though those policies weren't
actually being followed.
This
led to the election of Alan Garcia in 1985 as president. Garcia enacted
populist economic reforms that only served to weaken the economy and shut Peru
out of international credit markets. Faced with a lack of access to credit and
deteriorating economic conditions, sustained high inflation became
hyperinflation in Peru. Sources: Hanke and Crus (2012), Watkins.
Daily inflation rate: 5 percent. Prices doubled every: 15 days, 2 hours. Story: The French Revolution (1789-1799) came
after a period in which France had run up substantial debts from fighting wars,
including the war for U.S. independence from Great Britain.
One
of the major economic policies of the French Revolution was the nationalization
of land formerly owned by the Catholic Church. The Church was seen as an easy
target for asset expropriation because they owned a lot of land yet had
relatively little political influence in the new regime.
The
government then issued assignats to the public - notes that
essentially amounted to a land-backed currency - which were supposed to be
redeemable for the land by note-holders at a future date. However, the
government ended up issuing way too many notes in an attempt to close the
deficit, devaluing the assignats and leading to runaway hyperinflation. Sources: Hanke and Crus (2012), White (1995).
Daily inflation rate: 4 percent. Prices doubled every: 16 days, 10 hours. Story: In 1979, Nicaragua underwent a
revolution that found the communist Sandinistas in power. This came against the
backdrop of a global recession and a financial crisis across much of Latin
America sparked by record high debt levels and the inability by nations to
service those debts.
The
Nicaraguan economy was ravaged by the revolution - GDP contracted by 34 percent
cumulatively during 1978-1979. When the Sandinistas took power, they
nationalized large parts of the economy, further contributing to the economic
turmoil and hindering a robust recovery.
In
the face of this, the Nicaraguan government turned to expansionary fiscal
policy and foreign borrowing to stimulate domestic demand. This spending
accelerated in the latter half of the decade to finance a war with the opposing
Contras. While strong capital controls and a fixed exchange rate kept inflation
at bay initially, 1985 economic reform moving away from such policies unleashed
the suppressed inflation in the Nicaraguan economy.
Sources: Hanke and Crus (2012), Ocampo
(1991)
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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