Germany Experienced In 1923 An Inflation So Absurd That Families Burned Notes In The Stove, And The Government Had To Issue Bills Of 100 Trillion Marks.
The economic history of the 20th century holds extreme examples of monetary mismanagement, but few as symbolic as the hyperinflation in Germany in 1923, during the Weimar Republic. In a few months, the German mark lost virtually all its value. What once bought a house, at the height of the crisis, could barely buy a loaf of bread.
The episode became famous not only for the astronomical numbers but also for the surreal scenes: families using bills to light stoves, children playing with stacks of notes, and workers receiving salaries twice a day to rush to the market before prices doubled.
The Origins Of The Crisis In Germany
The German hyperinflation had deep roots. After the defeat in the First World War, in 1918, Germany was forced to pay billions in reparations to the victorious countries, as established by the Treaty of Versailles (1919).
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Without sufficient resources, the German government began to issue excessive currency to finance internal and external debts. At the same time, agricultural and industrial production had been drastically reduced by the war, generating scarcity of goods.
This explosive combination—an increase in the money supply and a decline in production—created the perfect conditions for inflation to spiral out of control.
The Escalation Of Hyperinflation
In 1921, there were already clear signs of mismanagement, but the situation worsened in 1923 when French and Belgian troops occupied the Ruhr Valley, the industrial heart of Germany, as a way to ensure payment of reparations.
The German government responded by encouraging strikes and passive resistance, while continuing to print money to pay workers and sustain the stoppage.
The result was devastating:
- In January 1923, 1 US dollar was equivalent to 18 thousand marks.
- In November of the same year, the exchange rate skyrocketed to 4.2 trillion marks per dollar.
- Monthly inflation reached 29,500%, according to later calculations by the Bundesbank.
In practice, prices doubled every 3 to 4 days.
The Absurdity Of Worthless Money
With the collapse of the currency, bizarre scenes became part of daily life:
- Wheelbarrows full of notes were used to buy bread.
- Stacks of bills were worth less than the paper they were printed on.
- Many families began to use notes as fuel, as it was cheaper than buying firewood or coal.
- Children were photographed playing with stacks of marks, as if they were building blocks.
The German mark lost its basic function: it no longer served as a store of value, unit of account, or a reliable medium of exchange.
The Largest Note In German History
The Reichsbank, the central bank of the time, tried to keep up by issuing notes with increasingly higher values. The peak was the issuance of the 100 trillion mark note (Eine Billion Mark), a symbol of the collapse of the Weimar monetary system.
Still, even with so many zeros, these notes could hardly buy anything in the market. Trust in the currency had completely evaporated.
The Social Consequences
The hyperinflation destroyed the German economy and plunged society into despair:
- Ruined Middle Class – savings of years evaporated in a matter of days.
- Desperate Workers – salaries were adjusted daily, but always insufficient.
- Hunger and Scarcity – the difficulty in buying basic food caused a humanitarian crisis.
- Political Distrust – the government’s inability to control the situation undermined the credibility of the Weimar Republic.
This environment of social chaos was one of the factors that, years later, opened the door for the rise of radical movements like Nazism.
The End Of Hyperinflation
The solution came in November 1923, when the government of Gustav Stresemann and Finance Minister Hans Luther created a new currency: the Rentenmark, backed by agricultural and industrial assets.
The conversion rate was brutal: 1 Rentenmark was equivalent to 1 trillion old marks. With the support of external loans, primarily from the United States (Dawes Plan), trust was gradually restored.
Although the economy stabilized, the traumas of hyperinflation remained etched in the collective memory of Germans for decades.
Lessons From The Weimar Hyperinflation
The German case is still studied today as an extreme example of loss of trust in currency. It shows that:
- Printing Money Without Backing Rapidly Destroys Purchasing Power.
- Social Trust Is As Important As Economic Fundamentals.
- Deep Monetary Crises Can Have Irreversible Political Effects.
Not by chance, post-World War II Germany adopted a policy of extreme rigor regarding price stability, even inspiring the European Central Bank in the design of the euro.
The hyperinflation of 1923 transformed Germany into a laboratory for economic disaster. Families burned notes in the stove, workers received wages in wheelbarrows, and the very concept of money was destroyed.
More than just numbers, this episode illustrates how monetary disorder can destabilize an entire society.
And you, reader: have you ever imagined waking up in the morning with enough money to fill the shopping cart and, by nightfall, not having enough to buy a loaf of bread?


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