// about
About The Printing Press
The Printing Press is a catalog of peacetime hyperinflations — currencies destroyed not by war but by governments that could not stop financing deficits with newly printed money, from Brazil's six currencies to Bolivia's textbook collapse. Each case is traced from the deficit to the credible reform — or the foreign currency — that finally stopped it.
What you'll find here
- The currency, the country, the year, and the verdict — stated up front, never buried
- The peak inflation rate and the highest banknote ever issued, in a four-cell stat bar
- A documented timeline, a three-act account, and exactly five contributing factors
- How the money died and the exact act that ended it — a new currency, a redenomination, a peg, a dollar, or a repudiation
- Transferable lessons, and real references from central banks, the IMF, and named scholarship
The Printing Press is part of Zero Hour — a reference network on dead currencies: the hyperinflations and monetary collapses, each resolved by the documented act that retired the old money.