THE SHORT HAPPY LIFE OF FIAT CURRENCY
  By Christopher Mayer
  "We inflate our paper currency, we repair commerce with  unlimited credit, and are presently visited with unlimited  bankruptcy."
  - R.W. Emerson, The Young American, 1844
  According to the Chambers Dictionary of Etymology, the  quotation above was the first appearance in English of the  verb inflate - meaning an increase in currency. If only  Emerson could see now what inflating has wrought. 
  In the pages of a book titled "Triumph of the Optimists:  101 Years of Global Investment Returns" there is a spread  of telling graphs conveying the inflationary damage done to  the world's currencies. Here we can see that not only the  dollar, but also all paper currencies, are engaged in a  race to the bottom.
  Monetary inflation is uniquely a 20th century problem that  continues to the present day. Prior to that, monetary  systems, such as they were, consisted of commodity-backed  money. Inflation, then, was most often a product of  temporary suspensions of the commodity standard, usually  occurring during wars or panics. 
  At times, inflation also occurred as the supply of gold and  silver grew. There were spikes in some countries and  regions during certain periods of time when the supply of  gold jumped due to discoveries and such (in California  during the gold rush, for example). But, by and large, a  dollar in 1900 had held its purchasing power with the  dollar of 1800.
  The 20th century American had a vastly different  experience. As the "Triumph" authors note, "A dollar bill  put under the mattress 101 years ago would today have only  4.2 percent of its 1900 purchasing power, that is, four  cents in 1900 had the same purchasing power as $1 in 2000."  Said another way - that's a loss of 95%.
  Furthermore, the pace of price increases was much greater  in the period subsequent to 1970, where, as "Triumph"  notes, annual prices rose at a 5.1% clip compared to 2.4%  for the first seventy years of the century.
  What is particularly scary about the dollar is that it has  been the third-best-performing currency in the world. Only  the Swiss franc and the Dutch guilder (by a very small  margin) have held up better. In the UK, for example, the  rate of price increases over the same full 101-year period  was 4.2%, compared to the 3.2% in the U.S. - a seemingly  small difference. And yet, compounded over time, U.K.  prices increased 55-fold, a factor more than 2 times that  of the U.S.!
  In a line graph found on page 92, the authors show us a  spread of sixteen currencies, plotted in terms of nominal  exchange rates against the U.S. dollar. Because of the  German hyperinflation in the early 1920s, the German mark  just falls off the graph, literally becoming worthless. The  other currencies turn in visibly worse performances than  the dollar, with the aforementioned exceptions of the Swiss  franc and Dutch guilder. 
  Keep in mind, as I pointed out earlier, the dollar has lost  95% of its purchasing power... and yet, it still beats  almost all of its rivals, sometimes by very large margins.  The performance of fiat currencies in the past century has  been dreadful. 
  But what has changed? If anything, the monetary setting of  today is worse than that of the 20th century, for at least  in the earlier part of that century there was still a gold  standard. Really, up until 1971, there was some semblance,  however weak, of an international gold standard. 
  The monetary shackles on today's central bankers are, I  would argue, much more lenient. Hence, the threat of  inflation is far more lethal. As horrid a performance as  the dollar turned in for the 20th century, the 21st might  make it look pretty good.
  Paper monetary systems have a tendency to blow up, in what  is commonly called a hyperinflation. They are really not so  rare, looking again at the 20th-century experience, as one  might suppose. Yes, there is the famous German  hyperinflation of 1922-23, where price inflation was 3,422%  in 1922 alone (and where, in January 1923, one could buy a  dollar for 20,000 marks - but by early November it took 630  billion marks to buy that same dollar). The numbers are  simply staggering and hard to comprehend. Yet, Hungary's  hyperinflation of 1945-46 was even more spectacular, with  price inflation of 19,800% per month.
  Phillip Cagan wrote, in the 1950s, what many consider to be  a classic study of hyperinflation, in which he set the  definition of the term at an arbitrary price inflation rate  exceeding 50% per month. Even so, Cagan finds seven  hyperinflations meeting his definition, the limiting factor  being that these seven were the only ones where monthly  price data was available. They include the great German  hyperinflation, two in Hungary and also hyperinflations in  Austria, Greece, Poland and Russia. These all occurred  between 1921 and 1946. Witness, then, that the phenomenon  was not a rare thing.
  To update Cagan, I hunted around for some more recent  hyperinflations. There were many, mostly in emerging  markets. A recent essay by a pair of IMF researchers  (Carmen Reinhart and Miguel Savastano, "The Realities of  Modern Hyperinflation") revealed a bunch more, occurring in  places like Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Peru and the  Ukraine. And they don't cover them all. Further searching  provided examples of devastating hyperinflations in  Zimbabwe, Zaire, Georgia and Nicaragua. I suspect there are  many more. 
  The most interesting part of the IMF researchers' essay was  their conclusion. They wrote: "The benign inflation  environment of recent years may lead some to believe that  chronic high inflation and hyperinflation have been  eradicated for good. History suggests that such a  conclusion is not warranted."
  Indeed, that is precisely the point. Do not be deceived by  recent experience. Structurally, all the pieces are in  place to experience very high levels of price inflation.
  Crystal ball gazing on monetary systems is extraordinarily  difficult, of course. There are lots of things that can  happen along the way. It was not that long ago - 1996, to  be exact - that economist Steven Hanke wrote a piece titled  "Argentina, the 'Germany' of South America." He meant the  Germany of the post-WWII era, where the sturdy mark proved  to be one of the world's most stable currencies. His case  rested mainly on the passage of tougher laws and a currency  board-like system. 
  This prediction, of course, proved very far off the mark,  since the Argentina of today is recovering after its most  recent financial meltdown. Far from being the Germany Hanke  envisioned, it became more like the Germany of the 1920s. 
  This is not to say hyperinflation is imminent or even  likely in the U.S., but it points to the dangers of men  with printing presses. And it points to the weakness of the  dollar - or any paper currency - as a long-term investment. |