The Catastrophic Experiment in Fiat Money and Land-Backed Currency
This nomination for the French Revolutionary government that issued the Assignat, a pioneering but disastrous experiment in fiat money. Initially issued in 1789 as bonds backed by the value of confiscated church lands, they soon circulated as currency. As the government printed more to finance wars and deficits without selling the underlying land, they rapidly depreciated, leading to hyperinflation. The Assignat experiment demonstrated both the potential and the extreme dangers of paper money not anchored by convertibility or disciplined fiscal policy. It proved that public confidence is the ultimate backing for currency, and that when a government uses the printing press to cover deficits, it can destroy savings, wreck the economy, and discredit the very idea of fiat money for generations, offering a stark lesson in the perils of irresponsible monetary policy.