POW Cigarette Standard
A unique form of commodity money surfaced in the Nazi
prisoner-of-war (POW) camps during World War II. Cigarettes came to fulfill all
the functions of money; a medium of exchange, unit of account, standard of
deferred payment, and store of value.
The Red Cross furnished the prisoners with cigarettes along with food,
clothing, and other goods. The goods were distributed without precise knowledge
of individual needs and taste, giving prisoners an incentive to barter unwanted
goods for goods that more closely met their needs. A situation in which trade
can considerably raise individual welfare is fertile ground for the emergence of
a money commodity, and in the POW camps cigarettes came to play the role of
money.
Prisoners set prices in cigarettes. Shirts cost 80 cigarettes, and one
prisoner would do another prisoner’s laundry for two cigarettes. Even nonsmoking
prisoners kept a store of cigarettes to buy other goods and services, and
prisoners built up supplies of cigarettes as savings, making cigarettes a store
of value—another function of money. Cigarettes met the need for a standard of
deferred payment. Debts were also run up in cigarettes, particularly gambling
debts, and prisoners bought goods and services on credit, promising to pay out
of future allocations of cigarettes.
As a monetary commodity cigarettes possessed many advantages. Their value was
maintained by a strong consumer demand; they were somewhat durable, not
perishable; and to make change they could be subdivided from a box to individual
packages and even to individual cigarettes.
The history of POW cigarette money furnishes examples of a wide range of
monetary phenomenon. Gresham’s law could be seen in the tendency for inferior
cigarettes to remain in circulation while prisoners hoarded higher-quality
cigarettes. Sometimes prisoners debased the currency by removing tobacco in the
middle of the cigarette and replacing it with inferior material. A diminished
(or expectation of a diminished) influx of cigarettes caused a fall in the
velocity of circulation as prisoners hoarded cigarettes, which were becoming
more valuable as prices in cigarettes fell. An added infusion of cigarettes, or
rumors of an added infusion, brought a rise in velocity, dishoarding, and rising
prices in cigarettes. Even banks were established that issued bank notes
convertible into cigarettes, but unfortunately the bank notes were often easily
forged. Communal stores emerged that were capitalized in cigarettes, and paid
dividends in cigarettes.
The history of cigarette money continued after the war. In postwar Germany a
cigarette standard emerged, particularly in transactions between Germans and
British and American troops. In the late 1980s in the Soviet Union packs of
Marlboro brand cigarettes served as a medium of exchange in a large underground
economy that had lost faith in the ruble.
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