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PP-008 Chile · Escudo 1973

The Chilean Escudo — Monetized to Death in a Three-Year Fiscal Spiral

Peak Inflation
~605%/year (1973)
Highest Note
10,000 escudos
Duration
1960–1975 (15 yrs)
Status
Replaced

Summary

The Chilean escudo was a Chilean currency that did not survive Chilean politics. Introduced on 1 January 1960 to lop three zeros off the chronically inflating old peso — at 1 escudo to 1,000 pesos — it was meant to be a fresh, dignified unit. Fifteen years later it was destroyed by precisely the disease it had been minted to cure, and on 29 September 1975 the military government that had seized power two years earlier retired it and brought the peso back, again at 1,000 escudos to one peso. The verdict is Replaced: not a stabilization, not a mere lopping of zeros that left the currency intact, but the abolition of one failed unit and the reintroduction of its predecessor's name on a new, stabilizing footing.

The fatal acceleration came in the three years of the Popular Unity government of Salvador Allende, 1970–1973. The driver was textbook deficit monetization. An ambitious program of wage rises, nationalizations, and frozen prices — the plan associated with Economics Minister Pedro Vuskovic — was financed not by taxation but by the central bank's printing press. The fiscal deficit, around 1.4% of GDP in 1970, ballooned past 20% of GDP by 1973 on some estimates and toward 30% on others; the money base grew explosively, with currency issue rising roughly 178% in 1972 and on the order of 360% in 1973. With price controls holding official prices down, shortages, queues, and a vast black market did the real pricing. When the controls cracked, the suppressed inflation surged through.

The headline numbers are contested precisely because of those controls, and the dossier states the range rather than pretending to a single truth. Annual inflation reached roughly 255% in 1972 and is most often cited at around 508% to 605% for 1973; measured at free-market rather than official prices, some authorities put the August 1973 rate above 1,500% annualized. Whatever the exact figure, this was a true extreme inflation, and the escudo — a currency whose largest note had climbed to 10,000 escudos by 1974 — had effectively ceased to store value.

The political rupture is a matter of record and is noted here soberly, because the lens of this file is monetary, not partisan. On 11 September 1973 a military coup overthrew Allende; he died that day. The fiscal and monetary collapse did not end with the change of government — inflation ran above 600% in 1974 once remaining price controls were lifted and the suppressed pressure was released, and averaged in the hundreds of percent in 1975. The escudo was beyond saving. Decree Law 1,123, published on 4 August 1975, reintroduced the peso at 1,000 escudos to one, with the escudo formally withdrawn on 29 September 1975 — the act that closes this case.

Timeline

1 January 1960
The escudo is born
Chile replaces the old peso at 1 escudo = 1,000 pesos, striking three zeros off a unit already worn by decades of chronic inflation.
1960s
The chronic condition persists
Inflation never disappears; Chile's post-war norm is double-digit annual price rises financed in part by budget deficits and money creation.
November 1970
Popular Unity takes office
Allende's government launches the Vuskovic program: large wage increases, nationalizations, and pervasive price controls, with the deficit covered by the central bank.
1971
The sugar-high year
Demand stimulus delivers fast growth and inflation held artificially near 22% by controls — the calm before the spiral.
1972
The deficit detonates
Annual inflation jumps to roughly 255%; the fiscal deficit surpasses 13% of GDP; currency issue rises about 178%. Shortages and black markets spread.
1973
Extreme inflation
The public-sector deficit reaches an estimated 20–30% of GDP; currency issue grows roughly 360%; annual inflation is cited at ~508–605% (and far higher at free-market prices).
11 September 1973
The coup
The military overthrows the Allende government; Allende dies that day. The monetary collapse is inherited, not ended.
1974
The dam breaks
With remaining price controls removed, suppressed inflation surges; the annual rate exceeds 600%. The 10,000-escudo note — the highest issued — is in circulation.
1975
Shock stabilization begins
A severe orthodox adjustment is imposed; inflation, still in the hundreds of percent for the year, starts a long descent.
4 August 1975
The replacement decreed
Decree Law 1,123 reintroduces the peso at 1 peso = 1,000 escudos.
29 September 1975
Zero hour
The escudo is formally withdrawn; the peso, reborn, becomes Chile's currency once more.

The Vuskovic Bet: Demand Without a Budget

The escudo's destruction was engineered, not accidental, and it began as economic theory. The program built around Pedro Vuskovic assumed that Chile's factories and farms were running below capacity, and that a sharp redistribution of income toward workers — through large nominal wage increases — would stimulate demand that idle capacity could meet without inflation. Prices would be held by decree; the state would nationalize the "commanding heights"; growth would do the rest. For one year, 1971, it appeared to work: output rose, unemployment fell, and controlled inflation actually dipped.

The flaw was fiscal. The wage rises, the expanded public payroll, the loss-making nationalized enterprises, and the consumer subsidies all had to be paid for, and the revenue did not exist. Tax receipts could not be raised fast enough against political resistance and a falling copper price, so the gap was closed the only way a captured central bank can close it — by creating money. This is deficit monetization in its purest form: the government spends, the bank prints, and the new money chases a quantity of goods that demand stimulus has not actually expanded. By 1972 the underutilized-capacity bet had failed; output stalled while the money supply roared, and prices that the controls could no longer hold began to run.

The Two Inflations: Official and Real

Chile in 1972–73 ran two inflation rates at once, and the gap between them is the key to reading the numbers. The official rate measured prices the state had frozen by law; the real rate was paid by Chileans who could not actually buy at those prices and turned to the black market, where the escudo bought a fraction of its decreed worth. This is why the headline figures diverge so violently — roughly 508% for 1973 by one common measure, around 605% by another, and above 1,500% annualized by August 1973 when free-market prices are used. The controls did not stop inflation; they hid it, displaced it into queues and shortages, and stored it up.

The mechanism beneath was velocity as much as volume. As Chileans grasped that the escudo was losing value faster than any official statistic admitted, they fled it — into goods, into dollars on the black market, into anything that held worth overnight. Money that no one wants to hold circulates ever faster, and faster circulation is itself inflationary, magnifying the effect of every new note printed. By 1973 the escudo was a hot potato. The currency that had been created to be a stable, three-zeros-lighter peso had become a unit people spent the instant it touched their hands.

The Reckoning: A Decree, Not a Recovery

When the military government took power in September 1973, it inherited the monetary wreckage rather than created it — and, crucially, did not immediately reverse it. Removing the Allende-era price controls released the suppressed inflation in a rush: the official rate, no longer fictional, leapt above 600% in 1974. Only the severe orthodox stabilization imposed from 1975 — deep spending cuts, monetary restraint, the textbook shock adjustment — began to bend the curve down, at a heavy cost in output and unemployment that lies outside this file's monetary frame.

The currency act itself came in that grinding year. Decree Law 1,123 of 4 August 1975 retired the escudo and reintroduced the peso at 1,000 escudos to one, with formal withdrawal on 29 September. The symmetry is grimly tidy: the escudo had been born in 1960 by striking 1,000 old pesos down to one escudo, and it died in 1975 by being struck 1,000-to-one back into a peso. The numbers had come full circle, three zeros up and three zeros down, with fifteen years and one destroyed currency in between. The reintroduced peso, unlike the escudo, eventually held — but its survival belongs to the stabilization that backed it, not to the act of renaming alone.

The Five Factors

01
Deficit monetization is the original sin
The escudo died because a government spent far beyond its revenues and made the central bank cover the gap with new money. A fiscal deficit running toward a fifth or more of GDP, financed by the printing press, is an unlegislated tax on everyone holding cash — and Chile levied it at brutal speed across 1972–73.
02
A captured central bank has no brake to pull
Chile's monetary authority was an instrument of the Treasury, not a guardian of the currency. An institution that prints on fiscal command cannot defend the money it issues; the only limit on the escudo's debasement was political, and politics demanded more spending, not less.
03
Price controls hide inflation, they do not stop it
Freezing prices by decree suppressed the official rate while shortages, queues, and a black market did the real pricing. When the controls cracked, the stored-up inflation surged through at once — which is why 1974's measured rate exploded above 600% the moment the lid came off.
04
Velocity collapse accelerates the ruin
As Chileans learned the escudo was bleeding value faster than any official figure showed, they spent it instantly and fled into dollars and goods. Money no one wishes to hold circulates faster, and faster circulation is itself inflationary — the flight from the escudo magnified every note the bank printed.
05
Renaming the unit is not the cure; the fiscal turn is
Reintroducing the peso at 1,000-to-one merely reset the zeros, exactly as the escudo's own 1960 birth had. The reborn peso survived only because the 1975 stabilization attacked the deficit and the money growth behind the inflation. Without that fiscal reckoning, a new name buys nothing.

Aftermath

The reintroduced peso held, but the verdict here is Replaced, not stabilized, because the act on the record is the abolition of one currency and the revival of another — and the stabilization that gave the new peso its value was a separate, brutal adjustment, not a feature of the renaming. Inflation did not vanish in 1975; it took years of orthodox policy to grind it from the hundreds of percent into the double and then single digits, and the human cost of that adjustment — recession, unemployment — fell hard on ordinary Chileans. The peso introduced in 1975 is, with later coin and note changes, still Chile's currency today.

For ordinary holders, the escudo's collapse was the familiar cruelty of the inflation tax: anyone who held cash or escudo-denominated savings through 1972–74 watched their value evaporate, while those with access to dollars, goods, or hard assets were sheltered. The lasting monetary legacy was institutional and ideological — Chile's later embrace of a more independent central bank (entrenched in law in 1989) and inflation discipline can be read as the long scar tissue of an era when the printing press answered directly to the budget. The 10,000-escudo note survives as a collector's relic of the three years a currency was monetized to death.

Lessons

  1. A currency created to fix inflation will be destroyed by inflation if the fiscal hole that drives it is left open — the escudo cured the old peso's zeros and then grew its own.
  2. Stimulating demand without funding it is monetization in disguise: idle capacity does not pay for wage rises, and the printing press that does will run the price level instead of the factories.
  3. Price controls do not defeat inflation; they conceal and store it, and the bill comes due all at once the day the controls are lifted.
  4. Distrust a single headline inflation number when prices are controlled — the official rate and the black-market rate measure different worlds, and the gap between them is the real story.
  5. Renaming or redenominating a currency stabilizes nothing by itself; only a credible fiscal and monetary turn behind the new unit makes it hold.

References