Holiday distractions and all that. Plus, you have to wonder about the futility of discussing anything with the kind of people who pretend the US kept using greenbacks after the Civil War and that this caused the farmers in the Nineties to go broke. Plainly, these are the kind of people who really do want to nail mankind to a cross of gold.
You can not assume that because a handful of countries that used a fiat currency and later suffered a hyperinflation, therefore fiat currency causes hyperinflation. That's a logical fallacy called "post hoc, ergo propter hoc." Not testing seemingly favorable evidence is a flaw in thinking called "confirmation bias." So, yes, I most certainly can say the primary cause of hyperinflation is losing a war. The number of countries on that list that had a hyperinflation subsequent to defeat at least constitutes a prima facie case...for my position. By your logic, the US government's greenbacks would have led to hyperinflation. Facts refute you.
Also, insinuating that any bout of hyperinflation consitutes "failure," is sneaking in mental images of Weimar Germany or post-war Hungary or today's Zimbabwe. The US inflationary spiral of the Seventies almost qualified as a hyperinflation. Hyperinflation in most cases is not as damaging as deflation (aka depression.) A scare word is not a substitute for rational analysis of economic policies.
Lastly, I didn't know you were a plantation owner, who would have a rational reason for hating Robert Mugabe. Otherwise, it would just be blind racism. I can't say much for Mugabe, but he's not scum like Morgan Tsvangirai.
Fifty years is arbitrary. Many currencies have lasted for decades off a gold standard. Gold standard currencies fluctuate dramatically over long periods of time too. The Price Revolution of the Sixteenth Century is a well known example to those who study real history, instead of the propaganda versions. Actually most currencies continue after bouts of hyperinflation (the German mark is still with us!) If you don't get metaphysical and deny they are the same currencies, I won't get into the theology of grieving over the souls of dead currencies.
Your proposition can be formally stated: If a nation uses a fiat currency, it will suffer a hyperinflation. The contrapositive, if a country doesn't suffer a hyperinflation, it isn't using a fiat currency is contradicted by decades of experience of the vast majority of nations.
I will remind you that one nation, Japan, uses a fiat currency and has suffered a deflation for over a decade, to its great detriment. Properly speaking, the entire global economy, taken as a whole, hasn't been using a gold standard but it's suffering a deflationary crisis as well. Whole sectors, such as minerals like copper or agricultural products like sugar have had prolonged price drops. Gold standard monetarism not only doesn't have sensible answers to economic questions, it is so benighted it doesn't even have sensible questions.
It is astonishing to have to remind anyone that Adam Smith established very clearly that The Wealth of Nations is their economies, not hoards of gold. I personally have issues with the Scottish Enlightenment but everyone should despise the lovers of darkness.
Israe hasn't won all its wars. It's even a question whether it constitutes an independent economy. In any event, the war in Lebanon failed in its main aims, even if a stretch of territory was held for some years. There are counterexamples to the war as main cause of hyperinflation explanation, but Israel isn't one of them.
A hyperinflation is not the only way that vested interests can profit from a national economic catastrophe. Bubbles, whether in tulips or housing derivatives or the Albanian lottery, serve exactly the same purpose. A gold standard has exactly nothing to do with such criminality. Focusing on soft money as the great economic problem ignores the real problems troubling world economy. That's because it's a deliberate smoke screen spread by lying academics, especially the political hacks in places like the Cato Institute. It's always extraordinary that conservatives who don't believe people are born with a right to live are always so willing to be the kind of people who couldn't earn the right to live. If academic integrity were required, Cato Institute would be an abattoir!
As to the belief that the world will rise up and stop using the dollar, the Euro is right now falling to pieces because of deflationary crises exacerbated by the loony policy of hard money. Harder money, gold, can only be even more ruinous. As to China? The recent events in Korea are not aimed at that titanic threat to humanity, the super-powerful Kim Il-jong! They are military threats to China.
STJ, you can't pick and choose which countries have failed by simply removing those countries have been at war in the past, was once part of a socialist regime or falls prey to a douchbag like Mugabe.
You can not assume that because a handful of countries that used a fiat currency and later suffered a hyperinflation, therefore fiat currency causes hyperinflation. That's a logical fallacy called "post hoc, ergo propter hoc." Not testing seemingly favorable evidence is a flaw in thinking called "confirmation bias." So, yes, I most certainly can say the primary cause of hyperinflation is losing a war. The number of countries on that list that had a hyperinflation subsequent to defeat at least constitutes a prima facie case...for my position. By your logic, the US government's greenbacks would have led to hyperinflation. Facts refute you.
Also, insinuating that any bout of hyperinflation consitutes "failure," is sneaking in mental images of Weimar Germany or post-war Hungary or today's Zimbabwe. The US inflationary spiral of the Seventies almost qualified as a hyperinflation. Hyperinflation in most cases is not as damaging as deflation (aka depression.) A scare word is not a substitute for rational analysis of economic policies.
Lastly, I didn't know you were a plantation owner, who would have a rational reason for hating Robert Mugabe. Otherwise, it would just be blind racism. I can't say much for Mugabe, but he's not scum like Morgan Tsvangirai.
You state this is not a prima facie case for fiat hyperflation. I counter argue, please name me one fiat currency that has lasted more than 50 years off a gold standard, be that a full or partial gold standard.
Fifty years is arbitrary. Many currencies have lasted for decades off a gold standard. Gold standard currencies fluctuate dramatically over long periods of time too. The Price Revolution of the Sixteenth Century is a well known example to those who study real history, instead of the propaganda versions. Actually most currencies continue after bouts of hyperinflation (the German mark is still with us!) If you don't get metaphysical and deny they are the same currencies, I won't get into the theology of grieving over the souls of dead currencies.
Your proposition can be formally stated: If a nation uses a fiat currency, it will suffer a hyperinflation. The contrapositive, if a country doesn't suffer a hyperinflation, it isn't using a fiat currency is contradicted by decades of experience of the vast majority of nations.
I will remind you that one nation, Japan, uses a fiat currency and has suffered a deflation for over a decade, to its great detriment. Properly speaking, the entire global economy, taken as a whole, hasn't been using a gold standard but it's suffering a deflationary crisis as well. Whole sectors, such as minerals like copper or agricultural products like sugar have had prolonged price drops. Gold standard monetarism not only doesn't have sensible answers to economic questions, it is so benighted it doesn't even have sensible questions.

It is astonishing to have to remind anyone that Adam Smith established very clearly that The Wealth of Nations is their economies, not hoards of gold. I personally have issues with the Scottish Enlightenment but everyone should despise the lovers of darkness.
You quote that countries that win wars don't hyperinflate. Well Israel has won all of its wars, so what is their problem? Why have they hyperinflated?
Israe hasn't won all its wars. It's even a question whether it constitutes an independent economy. In any event, the war in Lebanon failed in its main aims, even if a stretch of territory was held for some years. There are counterexamples to the war as main cause of hyperinflation explanation, but Israel isn't one of them.
The key question is who survived and prospered after these hyperinflations? Those who held assets outside the fiat system.
A hyperinflation is not the only way that vested interests can profit from a national economic catastrophe. Bubbles, whether in tulips or housing derivatives or the Albanian lottery, serve exactly the same purpose. A gold standard has exactly nothing to do with such criminality. Focusing on soft money as the great economic problem ignores the real problems troubling world economy. That's because it's a deliberate smoke screen spread by lying academics, especially the political hacks in places like the Cato Institute. It's always extraordinary that conservatives who don't believe people are born with a right to live are always so willing to be the kind of people who couldn't earn the right to live. If academic integrity were required, Cato Institute would be an abattoir!
As to the belief that the world will rise up and stop using the dollar, the Euro is right now falling to pieces because of deflationary crises exacerbated by the loony policy of hard money. Harder money, gold, can only be even more ruinous. As to China? The recent events in Korea are not aimed at that titanic threat to humanity, the super-powerful Kim Il-jong! They are military threats to China.