Your cash could end up all but worthless

By MoneyWeek editor-in-chief Merryn Somerset Webb Oct 08, 2012

Merryn Somerset-Webb

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I have a list pinned above my desk of things I want to write about when I get around to it. Over the summer I added “coming hyperinflation in Iran” to the list in capital letters. Sadly, the market has beaten me to it.

This week, the collapse of the Iranian rial hit the mainstream news. It has been falling since the US and the EU imposed sanctions in 2010 but in the past few weeks that fall has accelerated and the usual side effects of rampant inflation have been reported.

Consumers are stockpiling food; suppliers are holding back inventories to keep ahead of price rises; high value items are quoted in dollars; and angry citizens are protesting in the streets.

A few weeks ago this was just very high inflation. Now, according to Professor Steven Hanke of John Hopkins University, it is officially hyperinflation, the accepted definition for which is prices rising at more than 50% a month. In Iran, says Hanke, prices are rising at about 69% a month.

Notwithstanding the horrors this is causing in Iran, it must be extremely irritating for Hanke. Why? Because in August he released a paper with his colleague Nicholas Krus called World Hyperinflations. It has been three years in the making and lists 56 incidents of hyperinflation since 1795 (France). Had they left it a few more weeks there would have been 57.

The paper is worth reading purely for historical interest. But it is also relevant now, because while we tend to think of hyperinflation as an extreme event, it is actually fairly common. 47 of the 57 (I’m adding Iran) occurrences have happened since 1944.

There’s clearly been a bit of border shifting, but nonetheless this suggests that over 20% of the countries in existence today have suffered hyperinflation relatively recently. A good many others will have seen prices rising at rates we would consider shocking but do not quite qualify to for Henke’s list (remember, prices could be rising at 49% a month and it wouldn’t cut the mustard).

Add that to the reminder from Iran that inflation comes first slowly and then very fast, and you may already be wondering about the implications of quantitative easing (QE) in the West – and the growing suspicion that today’s money printing will be tomorrow’s inflation.


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I’m not suggesting that hyperinflation is around the corner for the West. Most economists argue, rightly, that central banks are only responsible for a small percentage of most countries’ money creation. The rest comes via credit creation by our commercial banks and at the moment these are mostly contracting rather than expanding lending. That means overall money supply is barely expanding fast enough to prevent deflation, let alone create inflation.

At the same time, stable countries with liberal and diverse political institutions should be capable of preventing monetary crises. But it is worth remembering the message that 'QE infinity' (the limitless QE pursued by the Fed) and near-zero interest rates are sending you.

They tell you your cash is all but worthless. It doesn’t deserve a real return and it has so little intrinsic value it can be created in vast volumes at the touch of a button. The point to keep in mind is that there are two variables at work when it comes to monetary inflation. The first is the supply of money. The more money, the more likely prices will rise. The second is the speed at which money moves around the economy.

This is the bit to watch. It can rise for two reasons. The first is rising confidence – people think things are improving fast and start to borrow, spend and invest in response. Fat chance of that right now. The second is falling confidence. People look at the money in their hands and wonder if it will be worth as much tomorrow as it is today – if it is an effective way to store the fruits of their past labour (that’s all money is, by the way, a store of effort). They think it might not be and start buying hard goods. Money moves faster; demand and prices rise.

At the moment the inflation bias message of 'QE infinity' is one that only those at the top of our financial pyramid are really hearing; hence their frantic efforts to exchange cash for something, anything, with a real yield. The message might filter down before long, giving us, eventually, more of a currency crisis than we already have and high inflation. Or it might not. But surely the mere possibility is worth hedging against – with gold, which hit a year high this week.

If you don’t have a small holding, you might want to look at Hanke’s paper and, while marvelling at the fact that prices doubled every 15 hours in 1945 Hungary, wonder if you shouldn’t. Those of you interested in more risk might look at some of the Aim-traded gold miners. A note from First Columbus Investments points out that while the gold price has risen 190% since 2007, the price of shares in the smaller gold miners has not risen at all.

This article was first published in the Financial Times.

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  • 1. JREwing

    (08 October 2012, 03:38PM)  Complain about this comment

    "That means overall money supply is barely expanding fast enough to prevent deflation, let alone create inflation."

    Perhaps someone can then explain why petrol prices are at record levels in the UK, food inflation is running at double digits every year and transport costs are rising in double digits annually? Strange kind of "deflation" this is.

  • 2. Willem de Leeuw

    (08 October 2012, 04:43PM)  Complain about this comment

    @ JREwing: But do you spend ALL your money on the things that have risen in price as you say? Some things are cheaper or have barely risen in price at all e.g., blu-ray players, computers, software, music, film rentals, I'm not sure about cars overall but I notice some are still being sold at the c.GBP7k-8k mark. If you're lucky enough to have a base rate tracking mortgage no doubt you are feeling rather better off than you did when the base rate was 5%. It's about the basket, not a few cherry-picked items.

  • 3. dr ray

    (09 October 2012, 10:39AM)  Complain about this comment

    Willem@2
    Both you and JR are correct in a way but most of us buy food and petrol regularly and computers and DVD players rarely so putting excessive emphasis on the price of DVD players in calculating inflation is one of the ways the government defrauds the population. Other ways are substitution ie when something gets so expensive people stop buying it it is dropped from the index and replaced with something cheaper and so called hedonic adjustment where a car may cost £10000 but is valued at say £8000 on the index because it is better than an equivalent car 10 years earlier due to improved technology such as aircon or multiple airbags only available on higher priced cars in the past. Most of us have a gut feeling the inflation indices are taking the p155

  • 4. Teresa

    (09 October 2012, 10:51AM)  Complain about this comment

    Petrol, food, gas, electricity, water, insurance, etc. These are all soaring in price.

    Who cares about cheap toys when you can't afford the necessities?

    Methinks they fiddled the basket.

  • 5. Nick Fury

    (09 October 2012, 11:05AM)  Complain about this comment

    Most people have no savings, only this weeks wages, so things can only inflate so much without affecting demand in other areas. We are being squeezed in essential areas, food, petrol, power, etc where there is little choice to opt out, however, even demand here is faltering; less petrol used cheaper food stuffs, supermarkets luxury food sales are down, including their profits, so price wars are imminent here (Tesco certainly). Many retailers with unessential's down, to the point of extinction. Those with money are hedging, buying gold, which is on the up, to preserve/increase their wealth, little else has security.

  • 6. Teresa

    (09 October 2012, 12:07PM)  Complain about this comment

    @ Fury. Agreed. I work in retail, and I'm seeing it as we speak.

    I traded my house for a wheelbarrow full of shiny stuff a couple of years back.

    Now the wait.

  • 7. HL

    (09 October 2012, 12:27PM)  Complain about this comment

    A good article, Merryn but let us all remember that governments frequently deploy their power in order to preserve that power.

    In the past, there have been exchange controls, wage controls, price controls, punitive taxation regimes, and the confiscation of privately owned gold. In Lenin's Russia, NKVD thugs routinely accused poor farmers of "hoarding" grain and promptly took away next year's seed corn -- causing widespread famine.

    The venal stupidity of governments is astonishing.

  • 8. Luke

    (09 October 2012, 03:01PM)  Complain about this comment

    HL @ 7. The Tories may have their faults, but I think comparing them to the NKVD is a little unfair.

    Can someone correct me if I'm wrong, but is it actually inflation if prices go up but not wages? If petrol is more expensive because more people want/can afford it (ie China) or food is more expensive for the same reason (or because of exchange rate movements) doesn't that mean we're just poorer, rather than that we have inflation?

  • 9. JREwing

    (09 October 2012, 06:07PM)  Complain about this comment

    @ Luke - Wages in Zimbabwe fell (in real terms), the price of everything went through the roof and the people were utterly bankrupted (production of everything collapsed). It's not rocket science.

    Secondly, it IS inflation if the price of petrol is stable in gold terms (and has actually gone down) as is the price of food - but has risen in nominal paper currency terms. That is precisely how it is supposed to be in an inflationary environment. The fact that wages in the UK are not rising in nominal terms at the moment does not mean there is no inflation. All you can say, perhaps, is that inflation is moderate at this stage. That won't be the case for very long.

  • 10. Johnny-the-Walker

    (09 October 2012, 11:21PM)  Complain about this comment

    - Wow ! - what a well written piece, cutting right to the heart of the matter. The message that Bernanke has sent to Americans and their paper Dollars ,with his QE infinity plan,applies equally to the Euro
    and British Pound. The old saying " ..and who will watch over the watchmen " springs to mind with these maniacal moves by the
    world's money men charged with steering our economies. Does Bernanke , his co-conspirators and counter parts in Europe ever stop to think ,if they're getting it wrong ?
    There is only one outcome to all this madness - and it's ugly.

  • 11. Al

    (09 October 2012, 11:58PM)  Complain about this comment

    How do you work out a rise in inflation in this country in a globalised world? Surely supply and demand are bigger factors? Petrol prices are linked to the cost of oil which is further complicated by currency volatility between sterling and dollar. Poor harvests due to weather events raise food prices, increasing populations increase demand and thus prices?

    It seems to me true hyper inflation is something caused in isolation due to restriction of trade of some form or another i.e Germany, Zimbabwe, Iran etc. The money printing part seems like a symptom rather than the cause.

  • 12. jack

    (12 October 2012, 07:06PM)  Complain about this comment

    Two weeks ago I returned from a holiday in cornwall, the sea veiws were beautiful accept from THREE giant oil tankers sitting off the coast of Praa Sands, they were there all week swinging on the tides and i'm betting they are still there and full to the brim, waiting for the price to rise!

    There is no shortage of oil yet and no shortage of greed

  • 13. Boris MacDonut

    (13 October 2012, 08:31PM)  Complain about this comment

    #12 Jack. This may not be so. The Carrick Roads and Falmouth have been used for years to refit Oil Tankers. It is one of Europe's largest/deepest natural harbours and for many years several redundant tankers sat idle in the Helford river. The three that blighted your Cornish sojourn may have been awaiting the knacker's yard or storage. Also,they often wait here until the economics in their home country is favourable to a return. My bet is a few dozen homesick Filipinos on board waiting for the thumbs up to go back to Kuwait for more black stuff.

  • 14. smlaing

    (14 October 2012, 04:34PM)  Complain about this comment

    Forget all the crap about the non essentials. The process by which super high inflation is the same everytime and it the same today. If you think the inflation over the last 5 years was high........You ain't seen nothing yet. The next 5 years are going to take your breath away!

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