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Home›The Economy›How Money Works›Historical Case Studies

What Is Hyperinflation?

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
4 sources5 min readUpdated June 16, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • Hyperinflation occurs when prices rise so fast (>50% monthly) that the currency becomes nearly worthless
  • Modern hyperinflation episodes include Zimbabwe (2008), Venezuela (2016+), and Lebanon (2019+), all caused by government money-printing
  • During hyperinflation, savings are destroyed overnight, real wages fall, and economies collapse into barter
  • Hyperinflation is caused by governments printing money without economic output backing it up—usually from fiscal crises or war
  • The only cure is a currency reset and government fiscal discipline—painful but necessary
On this page
  • How Hyperinflation Develops
  • Zimbabwe's Hyperinflation (2008)
  • Venezuela's Hyperinflation (2016-present)
  • The Post-WWI German Hyperinflation (1923)
  • Common Causes
  • The Broader Lesson

Hyperinflation is extreme, runaway inflation where the general price level rises so rapidly (typically >50% per month) that the currency becomes nearly worthless and normal economic exchange breaks down.

How Hyperinflation Develops

Hyperinflation typically follows this progression:

  1. Government fiscal crisis: A government spends far more than it collects in taxes (war costs, entitlements, corruption)
  2. Financing gap: Unable to raise taxes enough or borrow at reasonable rates, the government turns to money-printing
  3. Currency loses credibility: People realize the government will keep printing. They lose faith in the currency.
  4. Velocity accelerates: People rush to spend money before it loses more value. Money circulates faster.
  5. Prices explode: Businesses see currency devaluing in real-time. They raise prices daily, then hourly.
  6. Currency hyperinflates: Prices rise so fast that the currency becomes inconvenient. Barter emerges.

Zimbabwe's Hyperinflation (2008)

Zimbabwe offers the clearest modern example of hyperinflation:

2000: President Robert Mugabe begins seizing white-owned farms (mismanaged, destroying agricultural output). Economic decline accelerates.

2004: Inflation hits 100% annually. Real wages begin falling as salary increases lag price increases.

2006: Inflation reaches 1,000% annually. The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe starts printing money to fund government spending.

2008: Hyperinflation peaks. Official inflation is measured at 89.7 sextillion percent annually (a number so large it's meaningless). In reality, prices were doubling every 24-36 hours.

By November 2008, the Zimbabwean dollar was so worthless that the government redenominated the currency, cutting 12 zeros off. The new "second dollar" quickly suffered the same fate.

Daily reality:

  • Bread prices changed twice daily
  • Workers were paid in cash that lost value before they got home
  • Savings accumulated over decades became worthless in months
  • Supermarkets were empty (businesses couldn't replenish at those prices)
  • People resorted to barter

The solution: In 2009, Zimbabwe abandoned its currency entirely and adopted the U.S. dollar. This immediately stopped hyperinflation. The economy began recovering, though it was devastated.

Venezuela's Hyperinflation (2016-present)

Venezuela offers a second modern lesson:

1998-2012: Hugo Chávez becomes president. He funds expansive social programs by raising government spending 300%. Initially, high oil prices fund this. But spending exceeds revenue.

2013: Oil prices fall. Government revenue drops 50%. Faced with a fiscal crisis, the government prints money instead of cutting spending.

2016: Inflation hits 400% annually. The Venezuelan bolívar loses value dramatically.

2019: Inflation accelerates to 65,000% in official terms. Unofficially, prices are doubling monthly.

2023: Inflation estimates range from 100% to 300%+ annually. The bolívar has become essentially worthless.

Unlike Zimbabwe, which switched to the U.S. dollar, Venezuela's government refuses to abandon its currency. The bolívar continues deteriorating.

Results: Over 7 million Venezuelans have emigrated (25% of the population). Those who remained face shortages of food, medicine, and electricity. The economy has shrunk by 75% since Chávez's death in 2013.

The Post-WWI German Hyperinflation (1923)

Hyperflation's historical apex occurred in 1920s Germany:

1918: World War I ends. Germany is required to pay 132 billion gold marks in reparations (impossibly high). The government can't raise this through taxation.

1921: The government begins printing money. Inflation accelerates.

1922: Prices are rising weekly. The mark loses value daily.

July 1923: A loaf of bread costs 400,000 marks. Hyperinflation is accelerating exponentially.

August 1923: A loaf of bread costs 1.5 million marks.

September 1923: A loaf of bread costs 1 billion marks. The government is printing currency 24/7.

November 1923 (peak): A loaf of bread costs 200 billion marks. At this point, the currency is so worthless that people burned it for heat instead of buying fuel. Wages were paid daily instead of weekly because they'd be worthless by week's end.

The solution: The government introduced the Rentenmark, a new currency backed by land and industrial assets. This immediately stopped hyperinflation, though it required the government to stop spending beyond its means.

Common Causes

All hyperinflation episodes share common causes:

1. Massive fiscal deficits: Government spending far exceeds revenue 2. Money printing: Unable to borrow, governments print currency 3. Loss of credibility: People lose faith the currency will hold value 4. Velocity acceleration: Money changes hands faster as people rush to spend it 5. Wage-price spirals: Workers demand higher wages; businesses raise prices; workers demand higher wages again

Understanding these causes reveals the solution: government must balance its budget. Without fiscal discipline, hyperinflation is inevitable.

The Broader Lesson

Hyperinflation is an extreme example of what happens when governments spend beyond their means and use money-printing to finance the gap. It's not a mystery or an accident—it's a predictable consequence of unsustainable fiscal policy.

Modern central banks understand this. The U.S., European Union, and most developed nations maintain independent central banks that resist political pressure to print money excessively. This independence is the structural defense against hyperinflation.

Developing nations without independent central banks remain vulnerable. Venezuela's government can force its central bank to print money; the U.S. Federal Reserve has institutional independence that prevents this.

◆ Sources

  1. Hyperinflation Explained — Investopedia
  2. Zimbabwe Currency Crisis — Investopedia
  3. Venezuela Economic Crisis — IMF
  4. Britannica — Hyperinflation
On this page
  • How Hyperinflation Develops
  • Zimbabwe's Hyperinflation (2008)
  • Venezuela's Hyperinflation (2016-present)
  • The Post-WWI German Hyperinflation (1923)
  • Common Causes
  • The Broader Lesson
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  • Why does inflation happen?
  • Platform Economics: Two-Sided Markets, Network Effects, and Why Winner-Takes-Most
  • What Is Short Selling?
All Historical Case Studies →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

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