Frankly, I'd urge everyone here to at least consider the upcoming crisis. You may not end up being affected, but a lot of people will be and you should at least do some research to see if you'll be one of them. Otherwise, you may have to live in times even more unprecedented than the current one.
What kind of research can help one find out if one will be subject to hyperinflation?
Well the thing is, economic disasters like this tend to be quite hard to predict. There are usually a lot of scattered data points that don't say much on their own, and only create a picture when they are aggregated together. Even when you go through this kind of effort the picture tends to be fuzzy and it only becomes crystal clear after the disaster has happened and you have the benefit of hindsight.
The real kicker though is the fact that you're looking at economic data. Economists track hundreds of things, and often name them with confusing acronyms. Without training, it's incredibly difficult to figure what is you're looking for, let alone how to interpret it!
At the end of day, there's only so much you can do on your own. Some things you can only learn by listening to an economic guru and hoping you can trust them. Good luck finding one that isn't exclusively focused on the USA.
If you really want to get started, I would first try to figure out how much local currency your government has printed. Here is a link to a chart for the
USA. The Y-axis is measured billions btw.
If you click on the 5 year tab, you will see that there is a spike at the start of 2020. As of April, America has around 2154.87 Billion USD in circulation. I will be rounding up to 2200 BILL for the sake of future calculations. Before the pandemic, we had around 1800 BILL.
2200 - 1800 = 400
In other words America printed around 400 Billion dollars since the start of the pandemic. When you compare this to the total amount of currency in circulation (that is 2200) you get this interesting ratio over here:
400 2
----- = --- or around 0.18 in decimal.
2200 11
0.18 is pretty close to 0.20 or 1 in 5, which where you get the headlines saying that America has printed almost 20% of it's entire currency within this year. I don't know the full implications of this kind of number, but can you list any countries that got away with printing this much?
I don't have other numbers to compare it to (1980's Brazil, Wiemar Republic Germany, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe are ones I am particularly interested in) and I will explain why outside of this spoiler.
Thing is, printing money is not the only factor in inflation. If inflation was directly proportional to currency supply, we would expect prices to rise by %20 which though unpleasant, is ultimately bearable. Hyperinflation tends to happen in the hundreds of percentages though, and unfortunately I'm not an economist who can explain why.
Speaking of not being an economist, I tried to do a similar calculation for the Euro, but the only graph I could
find omits 2020 for some reason. I get the feeling that even less scrupulous countries hide/fabricate this kind of data completely so good luck with that!
Currency printed is not the only data point worth looking at though. Another things is that the prices of raw materials have increased by quite a fair amount. Regardless of the value of the currency, this should increase the costs of everything all around the globe. I don't know what else I can say about this.
...
The thing that scares me the most though is my local real estate market. As I mentioned in my previous post, the optimal strategy to weather the effects of hyperinflation is to invest in assets, particularly real estate. My local house Prices have increased massively in direct response to this pandemic and more importantly, lots of buildings are actually being sold at these prices. This isn't like new York where many overpriced properties are just vacant.
Now the thing is, the wealthy individuals buying these properties can actually afford to pay someone who understands economics to give them advice. As a result, when I see the wealthy prepare for a financial apocalypse, I start shitting myself. And before you ask, no this isn't just average real estate trading. I'm currently residing in the countryside and few people buy houses here for their own use. Many of these buildings were unsold for years, up until the start of this one. One year after the pandemic started.
It's this last reason that is convincing me to take this issue seriously. At the end of the day, nothing I have is definitive, but it's enough to make me consider taking drastic precautions in spite of the risk of being wrong.
Ninjaed
I see. OK, likely no hyperinflation in the good old U S of A (just the regular kind), but should give money when I can.
Don't count yourself safe just yet. Hyperinflation takes some time to kick in. It usually starts a couple years after the offending bills are printed.