1923: Hyperinflation | GCSE History | Weimar Germany
A long, long time ago... A long, long time ago...
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 Published On Jan 9, 2022

It’s 1923 and a goods shortage means that prices are rising like crazy.

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Revision Notes:
Inflation and hyperinflation
goods shortages in early 1923 meant that prices went up - this is called inflation
people had to pay more money to get what they needed
government decisions made things worse
the gov needed money to pay their debts but unemployment and failing factories meant they were getting less tax money
1919-23 gov income was a quarter of what was needed
the gov resorted to printing more money
1923 gove had 300 paper mills and 2000 printing shops dedicated to printing more bank notes
initially it made it easier to pay reparations
but it made inflation worse
vicious circle: prices rose more, more money printed, caused prices to rise again
by 1923 prices where huge
this extreme inflation is called hyperinflation
price of a loaf of bread: 1919 1 mark, 1922, 100 marks, 1923 200 000 billion marks

the effects of hyperinflation

1) Normal Living became impossible
printing presses couldn’t produce enough money
people had to pin money to letters because stamps were useless
they had to carry bundles of money in baskets and even wheelbarrows
many workers were paid twice a day so they could rush out and buy goods before prices rose even more
some shops refused to take money at all, asking for payment in kind (swapping goods)
some people raided shops because they couldn’t afford food

2) Everyone suffered from shortages
german marks became worthless for importing goods
1918 buying £1 worth of foreign goods cost 20 marks, by nov 1923, £1 worth of foreign goods cost 20 billion marks
foreign suppliers refused to accept german marks for goods so imports dried up and shortages of food and other goods got worse for everyone

3) People with savings were hit hardest
those with money in bank accounts, insurance policies or pensions had their saved money become worthless
thus the middle classes were the worst affected

There were people who benefited from inflation
people who had loans or took them out found that the value of the money they owed went down, e.g. some big businessmen borrowed money and profited because the value of their debts went down
other people hoarded goods and then sold them for a large profit as prices went up
foreign visitors also benefited, as the value of their own currency rose against the german mark, so they could buy much more with their money
german people bitterly resented people who made money out of their suffering

the damage done
after august 1923 a new chancellor gustav stresemann found solutions to some of the problems of 1923
by this point however the political and economic turmoil from 1918 to 1923 had done its damage
the WR was shown to be weak, it had been rescued by the freikorps in 1919 and workers striked in 1920, government forces had killed thousands of germans in order to stay in power
all germans had suffered. most blamed the WR for their suffering, the middle classes which would normally be the bedrock of the republic suffered most
extremist parties with private armies hostile to the republic had gained in strength

HOW I MODERATE COMMENTS
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1r...

SOURCES:
John Child, 'Edexcel GCSE (9-1) History Weimar and Nazi Germany, 1918-1939 (EDEXCEL GCSE HISTORY (9-1))' (Pearson, 2016) [ISBN: 9781292127347], pp. 23-24
It's a GCSE textbook, please don't use it for any serious academic writing!

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