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272 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1975
The government would shortly be unable to pay cash wages to the Army, to the police, or to its own officials. Already the officers of the Ministry of Finance itself were being paid partly in potatoes. The budgetary estimates included on every page the outrageous reminder, in brackets, that all figures were in quadrillions [fifteen noughts].
On October 15, the mark’s rate against the pound passed 18 milliards [18,000,000,000]. On October 21 [...] the mark had moved in three days from 24 milliards to 80 milliards to the pound… At the end of the month the banknote circulation amounted to 2,496,822,909,038,000,000, and still everybody called for more.
Money is no more than a medium of exchange. Only when it has a value acknowledged by more than one person can it be so used… The discovery that shattered [German] society was that the traditional repository of purchasing power had disappeared and there was no means left of measuring the worth of anything… For most, the degree of necessity became the sole criterion of value, the basis of everything from barter to behaviour. Man’s values became animal values. Contrary to any philosophic assumption, it was not a salutary experience.
The agony of inflation, however prolonged, is perhaps somewhat similar to acute pain - totally absorbing, demanding complete attention while it lasts; forgotten or ignorable when it has gone, whatever mental or physical scars it may leave behind.