Hyperinflation banknotes

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Dieses Thema wurde im Forum Englisch veröffentlicht

Hi everyone,

 

How many “hyperinflation banknotes” from the 60s to today can you think of? Am I forgetting any country?

 

Argentina 80s-90s

Brazil 80s

Rep. Srpska 90s

Rep. Srpska Krajina 90s

Turkey 90s-00s

Venezuela now

Yugoslavia 90s

Zimbabwe 00s

 

Thanks!

Zaire (Congo)

Mozambique

Peru

Angola

São Tomé and Principe

Georgia

Iran

Iraq

Poland

Romania

Uruguay

Uzbekistan

Vietnam

Zambia

 

I think Ecuador was one of them too, as they were forced to give up their own currency and used USD instead

 

Potentially

Lebanon

South Sudan

https://paperbanknotes.blogspot.com - Any offer for exchange is most welcome.
My spares: https://paperbanknotes.blogspot.com/2006/08/all-notes-listed-below-are-all-offered.html

Thanks! 

 

and I forgot Bolivia, Belarus and Nicaragua at least. 

Mexico and potentially Chile and Colombia 

dkallen78

Mexico and potentially Chile and Colombia 

+1

 

Just about every South & Central American nation (plus a slew of European countries post WW1) have experienced the horrors of hyperinflation. It's a wonder anybody trusts banks anymore.  Not sure what the attraction to hyperinflation currency is for collectors when it is such a common ailment (especially the hyperbole over Zimbabwe's infamous 100 Trillion note). 

 

Try getting the high denomination notes just before hyperinflation really jolts the politicians into lopping off several zeros on their currency or renaming their currency (that's the real challenge).

https://sites.google.com/view/notaphilycculture/collecting-banknotes

Lebanon is up to like 500,000 Livres or something now.

 

Turkey is starting to get worse and so is Zimabwe again, their $100 note looks tiny.

 

Argentina has also had some bad inflation and new notes are due.

 

If anything 2023 is turning out to be another global recession after Covid and the effects of the conflict in the Ukraine.

I love coins. Especially silver, gold and anything really old.
Member of the Royal Numismatic Society of New Zealand and the Auckland Numismatic Society

Moneytane

Lebanon is up to like 500,000 Livres or something now.

 

Turkey is starting to get worse and so is Zimabwe again, their $100 note looks tiny.

 

Argentina has also had some bad inflation and new notes are due.

 

If anything 2023 is turning out to be another global recession after Covid and the effects of the conflict in the Ukraine.

Lebanon is planning to introduce new LL 500,000 and LL 1,000,000 notes, but LL 100,000 is still currently the highest denomination.



This is supposedly how the LL 1,000,000 note will look, but I can't verify for certain whether this is some sort of fantasy mockup or not.

Personally I think most currencies could do with lopping off at least a zero or two once the current inflation surge has died down a little.

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