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“It was horrible. Horrible! Like lightning it
struck. No one was prepared. The shelves in the grocery stores were
empty. You could buy nothing with your paper money.” (1933 interview)

By Ellen Brown
May 20, 2009
Some worried commentators are
predicting a massive hyperinflation of the sort suffered by Weimar
Germany in 1923, when a wheelbarrow full of paper money could barely
buy a loaf of bread. An April 29 editorial in the San Francisco
Examiner warned:
“With an unprecedented deficit
that’s approaching $2 trillion, [the President’s 2010] budget proposal
is a surefire prescription for hyperinflation. So every senator and
representative who votes for this monster $3.6 trillion budget will be
endorsing a spending spree that could very well turn America into the
next Weimar Republic.”1
In an investment newsletter
called Money Morning on April 9, Martin Hutchinson pointed to
disturbing parallels between current government monetary policy and
Weimar Germany’s, when 50% of government spending was being funded by
seigniorage – merely printing money.2 However, there is something
puzzling in his data. He indicates that the British government is
already funding more of its budget by seigniorage than Weimar Germany
did at the height of its massive hyperinflation; yet the pound is still
holding its own, under circumstances said to have caused the complete
destruction of the German mark. Something else must have been
responsible for the mark’s collapse besides mere money-printing to meet
the government’s budget, but what? And are we threatened by the same
risk today? Let’s take a closer look at the data.
History Repeats Itself – or Does It?
In his well-researched article,
Hutchinson notes that Weimar Germany had been suffering from inflation
ever since World War I; but it was in the two year period between 1921
and 1923 that the true “Weimar hyperinflation” occurred. By the time it
had ended in November 1923, the mark was worth only one-trillionth of
what it had been worth back in 1914. Hutchinson goes on:
“The current policy mix
reflects those of Germany during the period between 1919 and 1923. The
Weimar government was unwilling to raise taxes to fund post-war
reconstruction and war-reparations payments, and so it ran large budget
deficits. It kept interest rates far below inflation, expanding money
supply rapidly and raising 50% of government spending through
seigniorage (printing money and living off the profits from issuing
it). . . .
“The really chilling parallel
is that the United States, Britain and Japan have now taken to funding
their budget deficits through seigniorage. In the United States, the
Fed is buying $300 billion worth of U.S. Treasury bonds (T-bonds) over
a six-month period, a rate of $600 billion per annum, 15% of federal
spending of $4 trillion. In Britain, the Bank of England (BOE) is
buying 75 billion pounds of gilts [the British equivalent of U.S.
Treasury bonds] over three months. That’s 300 billion pounds per annum,
65% of British government spending of 454 billion pounds. Thus, while
the United States is approaching Weimar German policy (50% of spending)
quite rapidly, Britain has already overtaken it!”
And that is where the data gets
confusing. If Britain is already meeting a larger percentage of its
budget deficit by seigniorage than Germany did at the height of its
hyperinflation, why is the pound now worth about as much on foreign
exchange markets as it was nine years ago, under circumstances said to
have driven the mark to a trillionth of its former value in the same
period, and most of this in only two years? Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar
has actually gotten stronger relative to other currencies since the
policy was begun last year of massive “quantitative easing” (today’s
euphemism for seigniorage).3 Central banks rather than governments are
now doing the printing, but the effect on the money supply should be
the same as in the government money-printing schemes of old. The
government debt bought by the central banks is never actually paid off
but is just rolled over from year to year; and once the new money is in
the money supply, it stays there, diluting the value of the currency.
So why haven’t our currencies already collapsed to a trillionth of
their former value, as happened in Weimar Germany? Indeed, if it were a
simple question of supply and demand, a government would have to print
a trillion times its earlier money supply to drop its currency by a
factor of a trillion; and even the German government isn’t charged with
having done that. Something else must have been going on in the Weimar
Republic, but what?
Schacht Lets the Cat Out of the Bag
Light is thrown on this mystery
by the later writings of Hjalmar Schacht, the currency commissioner for
the Weimar Republic. The facts are explored at length in The Lost
Science of Money by Stephen Zarlenga, who writes that in Schacht’s 1967
book The Magic of Money, he “let the cat out of the bag, writing in
German, with some truly remarkable admissions that shatter the
‘accepted wisdom’ the financial community has promulgated on the German
hyperinflation.” What actually drove the wartime inflation into
hyperinflation, said Schacht, was speculation by foreign investors, who
would bet on the mark’s decreasing value by selling it short.
Short selling is a technique
used by investors to try to profit from an asset’s falling price. It
involves borrowing the asset and selling it, with the understanding
that the asset must later be bought back and returned to the original
owner. The speculator is gambling that the price will have dropped in
the meantime and he can pocket the difference. Short selling of the
German mark was made possible because private banks made massive
amounts of currency available for borrowing, marks that were created on
demand and lent to investors, returning a profitable interest to the
banks.
At first, the speculation was
fed by the Reichsbank (the German central bank), which had recently
been privatized. But when the Reichsbank could no longer keep up with
the voracious demand for marks, other private banks were allowed to
create them out of nothing and lend them at interest as well.4
A Story with an Ironic Twist
If Schacht is to be believed,
not only did the government not cause the hyperinflation but it was the
government that got the situation under control. The Reichsbank was put
under strict regulation, and prompt corrective measures were taken to
eliminate foreign speculation by eliminating easy access to loans of
bank-created money.
More interesting is a
little-known sequel to this tale. What allowed Germany to get back on
its feet in the 1930s was the very thing today’s commentators are
blaming for bringing it down in the 1920s – money issued by seigniorage
by the government. Economist Henry C. K. Liu calls this form of
financing “sovereign credit.” He writes of Germany’s remarkable
transformation:
“The Nazis came to power in
Germany in 1933, at a time when its economy was in total collapse, with
ruinous war-reparation obligations and zero prospects for foreign
investment or credit. Yet through an independent monetary policy of
sovereign credit and a full-employment public-works program, the Third
Reich was able to turn a bankrupt Germany, stripped of overseas
colonies it could exploit, into the strongest economy in Europe within
four years, even before armament spending began.”5
While Hitler clearly deserves
the opprobrium heaped on him for his later atrocities, he was
enormously popular with his own people, at least for a time. This was
evidently because he rescued Germany from the throes of a worldwide
depression – and he did it through a plan of public works paid for with
currency generated by the government itself. Projects were first
earmarked for funding, including flood control, repair of public
buildings and private residences, and construction of new buildings,
roads, bridges, canals, and port facilities. The projected cost of the
various programs was fixed at one billion units of the national
currency. One billion non-inflationary bills of exchange called Labor
Treasury Certificates were then issued against this cost. Millions of
people were put to work on these projects, and the workers were paid
with the Treasury Certificates. The workers then spent the certificates
on goods and services, creating more jobs for more people. These
certificates were not actually debt-free but were issued as bonds, and
the government paid interest on them to the bearers. But the
certificates circulated as money and were renewable indefinitely,
making them a de facto currency; and they avoided the need to borrow
from international lenders or to pay off international debts.6 The
Treasury Certificates did not trade on foreign currency markets, so
they were beyond the reach of the currency speculators. They could not
be sold short because there was no one to sell them to, so they
retained their value.
Within two years, Germany’s
unemployment problem had been solved and the country was back on its
feet. It had a solid, stable currency, and no inflation, at a time when
millions of people in the United States and other Western countries
were still out of work and living on welfare. Germany even managed to
restore foreign trade, although it was denied foreign credit and was
faced with an economic boycott abroad. It did this by using a barter
system: equipment and commodities were exchanged directly with other
countries, circumventing the international banks. This system of direct
exchange occurred without debt and without trade deficits. Although
Germany’s economic experiment was short-lived, it left some lasting
monuments to its success, including the famous Autobahn, the world’s
first extensive superhighway.7
The Lessons of History: Not Always What They Seem
Germany’s scheme for escaping
its crippling debt and reinvigorating a moribund economy was clever,
but it was not actually original with the Germans. The notion that a
government could fund itself by printing and delivering paper receipts
for goods and services received was first devised by the American
colonists. Benjamin Franklin credited the remarkable growth and
abundance in the colonies, at a time when English workers were
suffering the impoverished conditions of the Industrial Revolution, to
the colonists’ unique system of government-issued money. In the
nineteenth century, Senator Henry Clay called this the “American
system,” distinguishing it from the “British system” of
privately-issued paper banknotes. After the American Revolution, the
American system was replaced in the U.S. with banker-created money; but
government-issued money was revived during the Civil War, when Abraham
Lincoln funded his government with U.S. Notes or “Greenbacks” issued by
the Treasury.
The dramatic difference in the
results of Germany’s two money-printing experiments was a direct result
of the uses to which the money was put. Price inflation results when
“demand” (money) increases more than “supply” (goods and services),
driving prices up; and in the experiment of the 1930s, new money was
created for the purpose of funding productivity, so supply and demand
increased together and prices remained stable. Hitler said, “For every
mark issued, we required the equivalent of a mark’s worth of work done,
or goods produced.” In the hyperinflationary disaster of 1923, on the
other hand, money was printed merely to pay off speculators, causing
demand to shoot up while supply remained fixed. The result was not just
inflation but hyperinflation, since the speculation went wild,
triggering rampant tulip-bubble-style mania and panic.
This was also true in Zimbabwe,
a dramatic contemporary example of runaway inflation. The crisis dated
back to 2001, when Zimbabwe defaulted on its loans and the IMF refused
to make the usual accommodations, including refinancing and loan
forgiveness. Apparently, the IMF’s intention was to punish the country
for political policies of which it disapproved, including land reform
measures that involved reclaiming the lands of wealthy landowners.
Zimbabwe’s credit was ruined and it could not get loans elsewhere, so
the government resorted to issuing its own national currency and using
the money to buy U.S. dollars on the foreign-exchange market. These
dollars were then used to pay the IMF and regain the country’s credit
rating.8 According to a statement by the Zimbabwe central bank, the
hyperinflation was caused by speculators who manipulated the
foreign-exchange market, charging exorbitant rates for U.S. dollars,
causing a drastic devaluation of the Zimbabwe currency.
The government’s real mistake,
however, may have been in playing the IMF’s game at all. Rather than
using its national currency to buy foreign fiat money to pay foreign
lenders, it could have followed the lead of Abraham Lincoln and the
American colonists and issued its own currency to pay for the
production of goods and services for its own people. Inflation would
then have been avoided, because supply would have kept up with demand;
and the currency would have served the local economy rather than being
siphoned off by speculators.
The Real Weimar Threat and How It Can Be Avoided
Is the United States, then, out
of the hyperinflationary woods with its “quantitative easing” scheme?
Maybe, maybe not. To the extent that the newly-created money will be
used for real economic development and growth, funding by seigniorage
is not likely to inflate prices, because supply and demand will rise
together. Using quantitative easing to fund infrastructure and other
productive projects, as in President Obama’s stimulus package, could
invigorate the economy as promised, producing the sort of abundance
reported by Benjamin Franklin in America’s flourishing early years.
There is, however, something
else going on today that is disturbingly similar to what triggered the
1923 hyperinflation. As in Weimar Germany, money creation in the U.S.
is now being undertaken by a privately-owned central bank, the Federal
Reserve; and it is largely being done to settle speculative bets on the
books of private banks, without producing anything of value to the
economy. As gold investor James Sinclair warned nearly two years ago:
“[T]he real problem is a
trembling $20 trillion mountain of over the counter credit and default
derivatives. Think deeply about the Weimar Republic case study because
every day it looks more and more like a repeat in cause and effect . .
. .”9
The $12.9 billion in bailout
funds funneled through AIG to pay Goldman Sachs for its highly
speculative credit default swaps is just one egregious example.10 To
the extent that the money generated by “quantitative easing” is being
sucked into the black hole of paying off these speculative derivative
bets, we could indeed be on the Weimar road and there is real cause for
alarm. We have been led to believe that we must prop up a zombie Wall
Street banking behemoth because without it we would have no credit
system, but that is not true. There is another viable alternative, and
it may prove to be our only viable alternative. We can beat Wall Street
at its own game, by forming publicly-owned banks that issue the full
faith and credit of the United States not for private speculative
profit but as a public service, for the benefit of the United States
and its people.11
[Editor's Note: The Weimar hyperinflation should not be used in the argument that hyperinflation is inevitable today; history simply does not bear it out. Governments may or may not have the means to wrench monetary creation and speculation away from predatorial global banks, but if they could, the monetary "fix" to our current problems might be easier than you think.]
Footnotes:
1. “Examiner Editorial: Get Ready for Obama’s Coming Hyperinflation,” San Francisco Examiner, April 29, 2009.
2. Martin Hutchinson, “Is It 1932 – or 1923?”, Money Morning (April 9, 2009).
3. See Monthly Average Graphs, x-rate.com.
4. Stephen Zarlenga,The Lost Science of Money (Valatie, New York: American Monetary
Institute, 2002), pages 590-600; S. Zarlenga, “Germany’s 1923
Hyperinflation: A ‘Private’ Affair,” Barnes Review (July-August 1999).
5. Henry C. K. Liu, “Nazism and the German Economic Miracle,” Asia Times (May 24, 2005).
6. S. Zarlenga, op. cit.
7. Matt Koehl, “The Good Society?”, Rense (January 13, 2005).
8. “Bags of Bricks: Zimbabweans Get New Money – for What It’s Worth,” The Economist (August
24, 2006); Thomas Homes, “IMF Contributes to Zimbabwe’s
Hyperinflation,” www.newzimbabwe.com (March 5, 2006).
9. Jim Sinclair, “Fed Actions a Bandaid on a Gaping Economic Wound,” reprinted in Go for Gold, September 18, 2007.
10. Eliot Spitzer, “The Real AIG Scandal, Continued! The Transfer of $12.9 Billion from
AIG to Goldman Looks Fishier and Fishier,” Slate (March 22, 2009).
11. See Ellen Brown, “Cash Starved States Need to Play the Banking Game,” webofdebt.com/articles (March 2, 2009).
Copyright (2009) Ellen Brown, republished with permission; all rights reserved
Ellen Brown developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil
litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest book, she turns
those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and “the money
trust.” She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to
create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get
it back. Her earlier books focused on the pharmaceutical cartel that
gets its power from “the money trust.” Her eleven books include
Forbidden Medicine, Nature’s Pharmacy (co-authored with Dr. Lynne
Walker), and The Key to Ultimate Health (co-authored with Dr. Richard
Hansen). Her websites are www.webofdebt.com and www.ellenbrown.com.
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