Few economic events have had the impact of German hyperinflation in
1923, still remembered as a root cause of Hitler's rise to power;
yet in recent years historians have defended the inflationary
policies adopted after 1918. Niall Ferguson takes a different view.
He argues that inflation was an economic and political disaster,
and that alteative economic policies could have stabilized the
German currency in 1920. To explain why these were not adopted, he
points to long-term defects in the political institutions of the
Reich from the 1890s. The book therefore not only reveals the
Wilhelmine origins of Weimar's failure: it also casts new light on
the origins of the Third Reich.