
Join BitDAO to earn a $BIT token here
In the early 1900s, many countries struggled to pay for the Great War. Germany was no exception. By November 1918, reparations payments had pushed the country's debt to about $25 billion — nearly half its Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Faced with growing national debt and a shrinking GDP, policymakers in Germany turned to another resource abundant in their country: its central bank, the Bank Deutscher Länder (the "Banking League of Cities"). As a result, between 1910 and 1923, German monetary authorities debased their currency at an unprecedented pace. In 1912 alone, they reduced the amount of gold in their coins by 20%. Understanding why this happened helps to understand how central banks operate. A central bank is essentially a commercial bank with one primary objective: keeping inflation low. Commercial banks lend money to businesses and consumers on-demand; if they don't have enough cash on hand to make those loans, they get a loan from a lender like a securities broker or insurance company that has more cash than they need. The commercial bank expects to be paid back with interest within six months to a year — not so for a central bank lending money through its own operations. The result? A scarcity of cash for everyday transactions — and thus higher prices for goods and services — as people spend more of their money paying off existing debts instead of buying things outright.
The role of central banks in financial stability
Central banks are the primary regulator of financial institutions, managing the money supply to maintain an environment in which banks have confidence in each other's assets and liabilities. This is important because if banks don't trust each other, they don't make loans. Instead, they pull money out of the system, resulting in a credit crunch. Central banks are also responsible for monitoring and responding to systemic financial risks, and as such many central banks run financial stability operations that focus on monitoring and managing systemic risk. These include managing systemic liquidity and risk, such as monitoring for signs of financial stress in the real economy and, if appropriate, intervening in the financial system to provide liquidity.
The Causes of the German Monetary Crisis
By the end of the 19th century, Germany was the dominant economic power in Europe. Its rapid industrialization and modernization have made it one of the world's leading manufacturers and economic powers. By 1914, however, it was also the leading military power, having developed the world's first modern army. All these factors, combined with an over-ambitious foreign policy, had led Germany to become a global economic powerhouse. As a result, by 1914, it had the world's highest GDP and the largest foreign debt. Unfortunately for Germany, the war, which was fought using the latest technology, was expensive. The direct cost of the war was estimated to be $513 billion in 2017 dollars. The cost of the Great Depression, which followed the war, was estimated at $2.5 trillion in 2017 dollars. Due to its heavy debts, Germany was in a weakened state when the war ended in 1918, and it fell behind on the repayments of its debts. As a result, it was forced to begin negotiations with the other Central Powers and Allied Powers to settle its debts. By 1923, Germany's debt stood at $300 billion, and unemployment was high.
The Central Bank Response to Currency Devaluation
In response to the monetary crisis, the German Central Bank, the Bank Deutscher Länder (BDL), which controlled the country's main currency, the Reichsmark, began to debase the currency dramatically. To do this, the BDL bought billions of Reichsmarks in gold from the Federal Reserve and other central banks and then flooded the market with unlimited amounts of Reichsmarks, which caused the price of the currency to decline. In fact, the BDL printed so much money that it became nearly worthless. The BDL also began to introduce a system of interest rates that would cut the value of the Reichsmark even further, causing a vicious cycle of currency devaluation and inflation. The BdL aimed to keep the inflation rate below 10%, but as the Reichsmark constantly declined against other currencies, the money supply grew, and the inflation rate went up. This system is known as an "unstable currency regime," which was a major contributor to German inflation.
The war contributes to Currency Devaluation
The Central Bank of Germany was in a difficult position. The war had taken a toll on the country's economy. The war caused the price of goods such as food and steel to increase, which meant that the Reichsmark did not have the value it once did. Therefore, the Central Bank of Germany decided to implement a deflationary policy to bring down the price of goods to keep the value of the Reichsmark the same. It bought up foreign currencies and sold them to the public. This created a demand for foreign currencies, which devalued the Reichsmark as more and more money was printed.
The Effect of Currency Devaluation on Prices and Inflation
The BDL's policy of debasing the currency led to the hyperinflation of the 1920s and '30s. Because the Reichsmark became nearly worthless, people began to hoard it, and businesses stopped accepting it as a form of payment. People found that it was more convenient to pay for things in commodities such as bread, which had become scarce as demand skyrocketed. As the price of bread skyrocketed, people began to stockpile it, which led to widespread bread shortages. This, in turn, led to riots, looting, and violence against the government as people demanded food. The government did little to feed its citizens and was forced to shut down public services, like transportation and gas stations, as people refused to pay for them.
Why is constant devaluation bad for prices?
One of the problems with constant devaluation is that it makes it harder for businesses to obtain loans and other forms of investment financing. This negatively affects the economy and causes the prices of goods and services to rise. As more things cost more money, people find it more difficult to live, and firms find it more difficult to remain competitive. Without loans and investments, businesses find it more difficult to grow and increase their profits. Without profits, companies can't repay the government for taxes and government services, which puts them at a disadvantage as they struggle to keep up with competition from other businesses that do have the funding to invest in new technologies and products that people want to buy.
How crypto can play its role in the debasement process
Crypto can play a major role in the debasement process by allowing people to store their wealth outside of the banking system. This allows them to protect their wealth from devaluation and inflation, even if the government tries to debase its currency. By storing their wealth in a crypto wallet, people can keep their money outside of the government's control, even if it decides to go down the path of constant devaluation. It creates an alternative path to help people pay for goods and services while preventing the downward spiral of existing currency devaluation.
Concluding thoughts
The German monetary crisis of the 20th century provides a cautionary example of the dangers of constant currency debasement. In their quest to repay foreign debts and fund the Great War, German policymakers went to great lengths to weaken their currency, leading to disastrous inflation that destroyed the value of ordinary people's savings. In the end, widespread hyperinflation forced people to make it harder to survive. Perhaps, cryptocurrencies will offer an alternative route when currency debasement happens.
Note: the post was shared on multiple platforms here.
You can refer my previous article lists here and here
------------------------
2022 Prediction
2022 Prediction #1: L1 Scalability
2022 Prediction #2: L2 Bridges
2022 Prediction #3: Zero-Knowledge Proofs or ZKPs
2022 Prediction #4: Regulated Defi On-Chain KYC
2022 Prediction #5: Institutional Crypto Adoption
2022 Prediction #6: Defi Insurance
2022 Prediction #7: NFTs-Based Communities - DAO 1.5
2022 Prediction #8: Metaverse and NFTs
2022 Prediction #9: Web2 Companies’ FOMO
2022 Prediction #10: Time for DAO 2.0
------------------------
DAO The Way
DAO The Way Part 1
DAO The Way Part 2
DAO The Way Part 3
DAO The Way Part 4
DAO The Way Part 5
DAO The Way Part 6
DAO The Way Part 7
DAO The Way Part 8
DAO The Way Part 9
DAO The Way Part 10
DAO The Way Part 11
DAO The Way Part 12
DAO The Way Part 13
------------------------
Learn How To Defi
Learn How To Defi Part 1
Learn How To Defi Part 2
Learn How To Defi Part 3
Learn How To Defi Part 4
Learn How To Defi Part 5
------------------------
Crypto Comics
Crypto Comics
Crypto Comics - PoW
Crypto Comics - Who is Satoshi
Crypto Comics - What is Token
Crypto Comics - What is DeFi
Crypto Comics - What is Wallet
Crypto Comics - What is HODL
Crypto Comics - What is Coinbase
Crypto Comics - What is PoS
Crypto Comics - What is DAO
Crypto Comics - What is A Block
Crypto Comics - What is NFT
Crypto Comics - What is Fork
Crypto Comics - What is Web3
Crypto Comics - What is DeFi-2
Crypto Comics - What is Yearn Finance
Crypto Comics - What is Degen
Crypto Comics - What is Aping
Crypto Comics - What is Cold Wallet
Crypto Comics - What is Hot Wallet
Crypto Comics - What is Airdrop
Crypto Comics - What is DYOR
Crypto Comics - What is 65537
Crypto Comics - What is RC4
Crypto Comics - What is WAGMI
Crypto Comics - What is Bagholder
Crypto Comics - What is Decentralization
Crypto Comics - What is Wallet Address
Crypto Comics - What is Plagiarism in Web3
Crypto Comics - What is Bart Pattern
Crypto Comics - What is Encryption
Crypto Comics - What is Consensus
Crypto Comics - What is Protocol
Crypto Comics - What is Stablecoin
Crypto Comics - What is ApeCoin
Crypto Comics - What is FOMO
Crypto Comics - What is Tokenomics
Crypto Comics - What is APR
Crypto Comics - What is to The Moon
------------------------
Learn Web3 in 100 Days
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - #1 What is the Internet and How Relevant to Web3
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 2: What are the Browsers and Servers
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 3: What are HTTP Status Code
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 4: HTML and CSS and JS
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 5: What is programming
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 6: Markup, Elements, Tags, and Hyperlinks
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 7: Style Your Web
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 8: JS
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 9: SQL
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 10: Front-End
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 11: Front-End Framework
Learn Web3 in 100 Days - Day 12: More HTML
------------------------
Modern Economic Nonsense
Modern Economic Nonsense - Inflation and Incentives
Modern Economical Nonsense - The Astrologist's Way
Modern Economical Nonsense - The VUCA World
Modern Economical Nonsense - Zug Tax and How to Run your Own Monopoly
Modern Economical Nonsense - Participatory Economy
Modern Economical Nonsense - Economic Models
Modern Economical Nonsense - Tokenomic Models
Modern Economical Nonsense - Design A Reputation-Based System
Modern Economical Nonsense — The Money Problem
Modern Economical Nonsense — The Treasury Problem
Modern Economic Nonsense — Bitcoin vs. Real Estate
Modern Economic Nonsense — A very long term view
Modern Economic Nonsense — Banking Collapse
Modern Economic Nonsense — A Wall Street Legend
Modern Economic Nonsense — A Modern Alchemy
Modern Economic Nonsense — Founder goes ghosting
Modern Economic Nonsense — Anonymous cool or fool
Modern Economic Nonsense — The market volatility
Modern Economic Nonsense — The money shortage
Modern Economic Nonsense — The web3 scams or not
Modern Economic Nonsense — All about debts
Modern Economic Nonsense — Metaverse is still relevant or not
Modern Economic Nonsense — A Show of Recession
Modern Economic Nonsense — A Myth of Valuation
Modern Economic Nonsense — Inflation becomes irrelevant
Modern Economic Nonsense — A journey of money laundering
Modern Economic Nonsense — Consumer Sentiment Might Be Low
Modern Economic Nonsense — Is payment technology still relevant in high inflation environment
Modern Economic Nonsense — Recession is coming
Modern Economic Nonsense — We are at the bear market, now what
Modern Economic Nonsense — Invest like a cat
Modern Economic Nonsense — Bitcoin leads the market recovery
Modern Economic Nonsense — The dollar is dying slowly
Modern Economic Nonsense — The current stock market wants to go back to 2019 but ignore the technological solution of the future
Modern Economic Nonsense — Today's fear, tomorrow's cheer
Modern Economic Nonsense — An engineering recession
Modern Economic Nonsense — The market is broadening rug pull everyone
Modern Economic Nonsense — The self-fulfilling recession
Modern Economic Nonsense — Crypto is changing the advertisement business
Modern Economic Nonsense — Blockchain phone
Modern Economic Nonsense — Next generation of wealth
Modern Economic Nonsense — Crypto winter prolonged with high inflation persists
------------------------
Yearn Finance Comic
Yearn Finance Comic - Part 1
Yearn Finance Comic - Part 2
Yearn Finance Comic - Part 3
Yearn Finance Comic - Part 4
Yearn Finance Comic — Part 5
Yearn Finance Comic - Part 6
------------------------
Curated Lists
Curated Lists - Web3 Culture
Curated Lists - Crypto-enabled Communities
Curated Lists - Crypto Philosophy
------------------------
Defi 101
Defi 101 - Part 1
Defi 101 — Part 2
------------------------
Thoughts
Thoughts about VC and PleasrDAO x BitDAO
The Crypto Market has Changed
The Myth of Inflation Hedge
The Myth of Stablecoin
The Myth of NFT
End of the Crypto Market?
The End of the Stablecoin?
Terra-UST Saga - How to repair the trust when there is no trust built on
How to deal with negative market sentiment
------------------------
Crypto VC Thoughts
Crypto VC Thoughts: Physical Assets vs Digital Assets
Crypto VC Thoughts: Digital Money Pushes Energy Companies to Innovate
Crypto VC Thoughts: GameFi Dilemma
Crypto VC Thoughts: Credit Oceans
Crypto VC Thoughts: The Death of Terra
Crypto VC Thoughts: Debunk Bitcoin Myths
Crypto VC Thoughts: Defense Crypto Investment Methods
Crypto VC Thoughts: New Type of Stablecoin
Crypto VC Thoughts: Crypto Business Cycle
Crypto VC Thoughts: Crypto Business Cycle 2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disclosure: The article was written by a delusional author who is possibly a nut job without any questions whatsoever about expertise in the subject matters. You should not believe any words this author wrote or you may experience similar symptoms or even possibly become a nut job.