The Unidad de Fomento example kinda blows my mind because its still running decades later. Most people assume these separation fixes are just temporary patches, but Chile proves you can build lasting economic infrastructure around split functions. Back when I was studying hyperinflation periods, the Weimar case always felt abstract till you see modern echoes like this. The fixed denominator idea sidesteps the whole indexation trap that doomed earlier attempts.
The Unidad de Fomento example kinda blows my mind because its still running decades later. Most people assume these separation fixes are just temporary patches, but Chile proves you can build lasting economic infrastructure around split functions. Back when I was studying hyperinflation periods, the Weimar case always felt abstract till you see modern echoes like this. The fixed denominator idea sidesteps the whole indexation trap that doomed earlier attempts.
Thanks for commenting. Appreciated.