InflationData.com is your source for understandable inflation data and consumer price index information
Inflation and the Iraq War
Home > Articles > Iraq War Inflation

Subscribe NOW to InflationData.com's FREE monthly newsletter eTrends

Inflation and Wars have been linked throughout history and this time will be no different.

 

How the Iraq War will affect the U.S. economy

Inflation Warning!!!   You need to protect yourself now!

June 14, 2006

By Tim McMahon, Editor

Wars almost by definition are inflationary this has been true throughout history.

Inflation is determined by the quantity of goods compared to the available money supply. See The Definition of Inflation

But the very nature of War results in the destruction of goods. In normal times money is spent to produce goods which makes the world a richer place.

But during a war. Things are produced but... the money is spent to destroy things. Often this is combined with an increase in the money supply in order to pay for the destruction. This increase in the money supply combined with a decrease in goods is classic inflation.

In ancient times the money supply was expanded by adding base metals to the coin of the realm. Perhaps lead or copper to the Gold.

One of the earliest civilizations to debase its coins was Ancient Persia as it financed its war against Greece.

In this case, it didn't work and Alexander the Great used the riches he captured to finance his own war on Asia.

At its peak Alexander was paying his Greek army half a ton of silver per day.

Later Rome debased its money fighting against Carthage - and eventually suffered so much inflation, it weakened its defenses against barbarian attacks.

The Anglo-Saxons used debased coins to buy mercenaries...

William the Conqueror (the Duke of Normandy) used the same tactics to launch the Norman Invasion. Which resulted in  Norman control of England.

Then the British used debt to fight Napoleon...

The American Colonies lacked coinage and decided to print Continental Currency to pay for the war against Britain (instead of raising money through taxes). Congress authorized the printing of  2 Million Dollars worth of  Continental Currency.

Interestingly, Britain fought back by printing more of the currency (counterfeits).

Contintal Currency

The combination of counterfeits and increased currency resulted in "continentals"  being worth 1/1,000th of their original face value at the end of the war. Talk about inflation! Out of that came the long lasting saying, "Not worth a Continental".

This inflation plunged the colonies into a deep recession which almost destroyed them.

One of the best known hyperinflations  occurred during the Civil War, as the South went broke printing Confederate dollars. See Confederate inflation to see the chart of values.

Interestingly,  the North wasn't much better off. As they sold over $853 million in war bonds. All of this combined inflation once again almost destroyed the country as "Carpet baggers" flooded the South looking to earn money any way possible.

The British financed World War I by taking out the biggest loan in banking history. Which began in 1914, the U.S. however did not enter the War until 1917.

The inflation data is as follows:

Date

1914

Ave. Ann. Inflation

1.01%

1915 1.00%
1916 7.92%
1917 17.43%
1918 17.97%
1919 14.57%
1920 15.61%
1921 -10.50%

During World War II, the U.S. National Debt rocketed from $16 billion to over $260 billion resulting in inflation rates in 1946 and 1947 of 18.13% and 8.84% respectively.

So we can see war and inflation go hand in hand.

The major fighting in the Korean War lasted from 1950-1953  and resulted in approximately 6% inflation in each of the first two years.

The Vietnam War lasted from 1964-1973. Inflation rates were as follows:

1964 1.31%
1965 1.61%
1966 2.86%
1967 3.09%
1968 4.19%
1969 5.46%
1970 5.72%
1971 4.38%
1972 3.21%
1973 6.22%
1974 11.04%
1975 9.13%

As you can see during the first couple of years inflation was low but as the war dragged on (and even after) inflation continued to grow.

Glyn Davies  spoke of War as a major factor in creating inflation in his book "A History of Money: From Ancient Times to the Present Day"

He said...

"The military ratchet is the most important single influence in raising prices and reducing the value of money in the past 1,000 years, and for most of that time, debasement was the most common, but not the only, way of strengthening the 'sinews of war.'"

The typical progression has been, First the war. Then the financing crisis to pay for it.

This usually resulted in weaker currencies, raging inflation, and a massive reduction in the personal wealth of the warring country.

It has happened over and over again  for the last three thousand years (many of which occurred in what is now Iraq)  And it's happening now, again...

Throughout the Years Iraq has been the seat of Battles with everyone from Mesopotamia and the "Fertile Crescent" to the Sumerians to Assyria, Babylonia, Persia and the Turks just to name a few.

So the US led  "War on Terror" is nothing new. 

But wars are expensive and have to be paid for one way or another. The war of 1812 raised US debt from $57 million to $127 Million in just seven years. It then took 20 years to pay the National debt down to pre war levels.

The Mexican war in 1846 and 1847 quadrupled the National Debt from $16 million to $63 million by 1848.

The Civil War was even worse multiplying  the federal debt by 37 times,  from $75 million in 1861 to $2.8 billion four years later!

From 1861 to the beginning of World War I (56 Years), the nation's debt had only increased from $2.8 to $3 billion. But it rose more than eight times, to $26 billion, over the next 24 months!

Over the next 20+ years, from the end of WWI to the beginning of WWII  Roosevelt's "New Deal" pumped up the National Debt to $72 billion in addition to stealing 1/3 of the value of all the Gold held by private citizens in the U.S.  (see Is Gold really a good Inflation Hedge?)

But during the brief  span of World War II, it had multiplied almost 4 times to  $260 billion!

Although not a real "war" the Cold War was expensive enough raising the debt to $2.7 trillion by 1988.

But now owe over $8 trillion. Thanks largely to the War on Terror and hurricane Katrina.

Is it possible that after three thousand years of history this war won't result in massive inflation? I don't think so!

U.S. spending is out of control... war costs are rising... and American consumers are  overextended. The government is borrowing and creating money out of thin air by inflating the money supply.

So where is all the money coming from?

We are borrowing massive amounts from China in order to buy her goods. Goods incidentally that are depreciating assets.

In other words, we give them valuable money and they give us stuff that will be destined for the scrap heap in a few years. This is the biggest transfer of wealth in history. We are selling our country for a handful of trinkets just like the Indians sold Manhattan.

Some have argued that the number of dollars of debt is not the most important factor but the ratio of debt to gross domestic product. This is an important point and currently our debt is at 65.1% of Gross Domestic Product.

The only time in history when the ratio was higher was at the end of WWII.  Even at the peaks at the end of the Civil War and  the end of WWI we were at less than 40%. So current levels are extreme.

Inflation is already baked into the cake. It is just a matter of time until it reveals itself. Now is the time to begin protecting yourself.

Has this article been helpful? We appreciate your feedback.

 

Back to the top

 
 

 

Main Article List

Subscribe to our FREE monthly E-zine 
and we will keep you up-to-date on what is happening in the area of inflation, interest rates and market trends.

 

 

 Can't find what you are looking for?
Try a  Google Search
 
 

Web

InflationData.com
Fintrend   YourFamilyFinances

Editor's Choice:

Books on the History of Money:

"The military ratchet is the most important single influence in raising prices and reducing the value of money in the past 1,000 years, and for most of that time, debasement was the most common, but not the only, way of strengthening the 'sinews of war.'"

 

 

In this book Murray Rothbard traces inflations, banking panics, and money meltdowns from the Colonial Period through the mid-20th century to show how government's systematic war on sound money is the hidden force behind nearly all major economic calamities in American history.

 

Milton Friedman won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2000 for work related to A Monetary History

 

 

 
HomeCPI-UInflationAbout usFeedbackFAQsSite Map
©2003-2007 InflationData.com. All rights reserved.
InflationData.com is affiliated with Financial Trend Forecaster, a publication of Capital Professional Services.
See our Privacy Statement. Send questions to
Site designed by of Intergalactic Web Designers.