The Great Inflation          The Great Inflation            In late-1922 the German government were forced to ask the Allies for a      moratorium on reparations payments; this was refused, and she then      defaulted on shipments of both coal and timber to France. By January of      the following year, French and Belgian troops had entered and occupied the      Ruhr. The German people, perhaps for the first time since 1914, united      behind their government, and   idle resistance to the occupying troops      was ordered. A government-funded strike began as thousands of workers      marched   let loose of their factories and steel works.

 The German economy,      already under massive press   ure, gave way. The   comfortable cost of funding the      strike in the Ruhr and the costs of imports to  go basic consumer needs      were met by the familiar expedient of the   impulse presses. Note      circulation increased rapidly, and by November 1923 had reached almost 92       one thousand thousand marks. With less than three per cent of government ex...If you want to   soak up a full essay, order it on our website: 
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