Hyperinflation: Revision history


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  • curprev 16:5416:54, 7 April 2024AnomieBOT talk contribsm 108,629 bytes +16 Dating maintenance tags: {{Citation Needed}} undo
  • curprev 14:5314:53, 7 April 2024GxJackson talk contribs 108,613 bytes −14,683 Why does a page explaining hyperinflation have a section of "things that are explicitly not hyperinflation"? This section is not relevant. undo
  • curprev 14:4714:47, 7 April 2024GxJackson talk contribsm 123,296 bytes −20 →‎Currency: I swear someone has just copied huge swathes of this article from an undergrad textbook and not even read it. What are these incredible, unsubstantiated claims? Cite some sources if you're going to say "governments will often", and there's no effort made to cite the claims about price controls. undo
  • curprev 14:4414:44, 7 April 2024GxJackson talk contribs 123,316 bytes −459 →‎Currency: These paragraphs are written in the past-tense as if they're referencing specific historical examples, but there's no context given, nor reference cited for these claims. undo
  • curprev 14:3814:38, 7 April 2024GxJackson talk contribsm 123,775 bytes −454 →‎Effects: This is a trivia point at best and adds nothing to the understanding of hyperinflation in this article. undo
  • curprev 14:3414:34, 7 April 2024GxJackson talk contribs 124,229 bytes +369 →‎Money supply: Claim was broad and unsubstantiated. Adjusted and added additional context and citation for addition.Also changed "printing" to "creation". Printing is a misnomer as a majority of the money created will not be in the form of physical currency. undo
  • curprev 14:1114:11, 7 April 2024GxJackson talk contribsm 123,860 bytes −100 →‎Money supply: Did someone just pull this straight from an undergrad textbook? Why are we using M/P here out of nowhere when it's not a format that's been used anywhere before this point in the article? undo
  • curprev 14:0914:09, 7 April 2024GxJackson talk contribs 123,960 bytes −7,142 →‎Causes: This Models section contributes nothing to the historical context, nor contemporary understanding, and it doesn't even make sense in it's own explanation. The velocity of money is a factor of the supply of money, so how can the theory not comprehend which of the two is the causal factor? The quoting of Friedman at the end is also a bizarre inclusion. This is a wikipedia article, not an economic propaganda book. undo
  • curprev 13:4513:45, 7 April 2024GxJackson talk contribsm 131,102 bytes −126 This sentence has it backwards and doesn't make sense ahead of the following sentences. How can it be claimed that government deficits cause hyperinflation, then in the very next sentence it's acknowledged that those deficits came in the aftermath of war and other social and economic disasters? Hyperinflation events are correlated with massive impacts like wars, deficits are not correlated with hyperinflation events. undo

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