When World War I started on July 31, 1914, people could not redeem their notes in gold from the Reichsbank. After this there was no limit to how many notes the Reichsbank could print. By the end of the war, the amount of notes in circulation increased significantly. At the end of the war, as stipulated by the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was obligated to “issue and deliver bonds to the amount of 100 billion gold marks,” and “deliver annually during the following decade at least 30 million tons of coal and large quantities of chemicals.”2 “In addition, 26 percent of the proceeds of German exports were to be paid in each of these forty two years. “The harsh reparation payments imposed on Germany led the mark to depreciate against foreign currencies,”3 and the government issuing a flood of new money with no gold backing, this led to inflation. By July 1922, the German mark “sank for the first time below 1 percent of its original value” and by January
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