Via Art Cashin of UBS,
Originally, on this day in 1922, the German Central Bank and
the German Treasury took an inevitable step in a process which had begun
with their previous effort to "jump start" a stagnant economy.
Many months earlier they had decided that what was needed was easier
money. Their initial efforts brought little response. So, using the
governmental "more is better" theory they simply created more and more
money. But economic stagnation continued and so did the money growth. They kept making money more available. No reaction. Then, suddenly prices began to explode unbelievably (but, perversely, not business activity).
So, on this day government officials decided to bring figures in line with market realities.
They devalued the mark. The new value would be 2 billion marks to a
dollar. At the start of World War I the exchange rate had been a mere
4.2 marks to the dollar. In simple terms you needed 4.2 marks in order to get one dollar.
Now it was 2 billion marks to get one dollar. And thirteen months from
this date (late November 1923) you would need 4.2 trillion marks to get
one dollar. In ten years the amount of money had increased a trillion
fold.
Numbers like billions and trillions tend to numb the mind.
They are too large to grasp in any “real” sense. Thirty years ago an
older member of the NYSE (there were some then) gave me a graphic and
memorable (at least for me) example. “Young man,” he said, “would you
like a million dollars?” “I sure would, sir!”, I replied anxiously.
“Then just put aside $500 every week for the next 40 years.” I have
never forgotten that a million dollars is enough to pay you $500 per
week for 40 years (and that’s without benefit of interest). To get a
billion dollars you would have to set aside $500,000 dollars per week
for 40 years. And a…..trillion that would require $500 million every week for 40 years. Even with these examples, the enormity is difficult to grasp.
Let’s take a different tack. To understand the
incomprehensible scope of the German inflation maybe it’s best to start
with something basic….like a loaf of bread. (To keep things
simple we’ll substitute dollars and cents in place of marks and
pfennigs. You’ll get the picture.) In the middle of 1914, just before
the war, a one pound loaf of bread cost 13 cents. Two years later it was
19 cents. Two years more and it sold for 22 cents. By 1919 it was 26
cents. Now the fun begins.
In 1920, a loaf of bread soared to $1.20, and then in 1921 it hit $1.35. By the middle of 1922 it was $3.50. At the start of 1923 it rocketed to $700 a loaf. Five months later a loaf went for $1200. By September it was $2 million.
A month later it was $670 million (wide spread rioting broke out). The
next month it hit $3 billion. By mid month it was $100 billion. Then it
all collapsed. Let’s go back to “marks”. In 1913, the total currency of
Germany was a grand total of 6 billion marks. In November of 1923 that loaf of bread we just talked about cost 428 billion marks.
A kilo of fresh butter cost 6000 billion marks (as you will note that
kilo of butter cost 1000 times more than the entire money supply of the
nation just 10 years earlier).
Read the whole thing
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