what we observe. Governments, rich and poor alike, have driven their economies
not just faster than the speed limit, but at engine-smoking, wheels-screeching
kinds of speeds. Why? Because shortsighted, corrupt, or desperate governments
can buy themselves some time by stoking inflation. We spoke about the power
of incentives all the way back in Chapter 2. Still, see if you can piece this puzzle
together: (1) Governments often owe large debts, and troubled governments owe
even more; (2) inflation is good for debtors because it erodes the value of the
money they must pay back; (3) governments control the inflation rate. Add it up:
Governments can cut their own debts by pulling the inflation rip cord.
Of course, this creates all kinds of victims. Those who lent the government
money are paid back the face value of the debt but in a currency that has lost
value. Meanwhile, those holding currency are punished because their money
now buys much less. And last, even future citizens are punished, because this
government will find it difficult or impossible to borrow at reasonable interest
rates again (though bankers do show an odd proclivity to make the same
mistakes over and over again).
Governments can also benefit in the short run from what economists refer to
as the “inflation tax.” Suppose you are running a government that is unable to
raise taxes through conventional means, either because the infrastructure
necessary to collect taxes does not exist or because your citizens cannot or will
not pay more. Yet you have government workers, perhaps even a large army,
who demand to be paid. Here is a very simple solution. Buy some beer, order a
pizza (or whatever an appropriate national dish might be), and begin running the
printing presses at the national mint. As soon as the ink is dry on your new
pesos, or rubles, or dollars, use them to pay your government workers and
soldiers.
Alas, you have taxed the people of your country—indirectly. You have
not physically taken money from their wallets; instead, you’ve done it by
devaluing the money that stays in their wallets. The Continental Congress did it
during the Revolutionary War; both sides did it during the Civil War; the
German government did it between the wars; countries like Zimbabwe are doing
it now.
A government does not have to be on the brink of catastrophe to play the
inflation card. Even in present-day America, clever politicians can use moderate
inflation to their benefit. One feature of irresponsible monetary policy—like a
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