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If all the paper money in a country was suddenly withdrawn

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smohit05 posted on Sun, May 27 2012 8:48 AM

Hello, hypothetically speaking, if all the paper money in a country was suddenly withdrawn from circulation, how would this affect the economy and day-to-day living? Would the value of coins shoot up? Would the barter system come into practice? What other scenarios are possible?

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*rubs his crystal ball*

 

People would revert to already established alternative currencies or medium of exchange, foreign or historic.

 

 

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Incalcuably massive and painful adjustments would be in order.

"The history of the world is the history of the triumph of the heartless over the mindless." - Sir Humphrey Appleby
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Answered (Verified) Neodoxy replied on Mon, May 28 2012 11:28 AM
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The same thing that would happen with the total removal of any currency

  1. The economy would collapse
  2. Assuming no military dictatorships or anything of the like came to power then people would start to rebuild the economy. Hopefully mass starvation would be avoided.
At last those coming came and they never looked back With blinding stars in their eyes but all they saw was black...
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Thanks for your answer :) Can you list some of the things that come to mind? I mean, people with credit/debit cards would still be able to buy stuff. Also, cheque transacations would continue to happen. Online money transfers would happen. What I'm curious about is the withdrawal of paper bills will definitely affect day-to-day living and the economy, but where would the effects be first seen and what would result into what happening? As in, something new would happen for the first few days/weeks, after which things would probably "settle down a little" when people and the goverment figure out at least a temporary solution. I'm more interested in those first few days/weeks.

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There are similar examples throught history where the paper money does not dissapear but loses value at an exponential rate.  We saw this in Weimar Germany and in Zimbabwae.  In these cases the governments trying to pay off debts kept payments to the enforcement bureaus slightly higher than the rest of the payees.  These enforcers in turn brutally kept people using the increasingly worthless currency and the economy fell too pieces as the pricing system lost all value.  Eventually the enforcers were paid in confiscated assets to keep the crash in progress.  Eventually the whole thing kind of deteriorated to abject misery and then turned up as people dropped the currency and began to use other currencies, gold and silver or a new currency of their country.

If paper money just dissapeared, I would expect exactly the same behavior by government and its enforcers.  So there would be a rapid crash as the pricing system broke down.  The enforcment bureaus would get paid in assets and the same series of events would happen albeit faster.

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Expect riots in the streets. And I don't know why holders of debit cars would be immune from an obliteration of paper money, as the debit system in America symply represents dollars, i.e. paper money.

How the global economy would address such an issue is impossible to say, but you can bet the people on Main Street would rapidly move toward an ad hoc barter system as soon as the food supply begins to dwindle due to the fear of suppliers not being compensated for their goods.

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