Buy food while you can. Actually after WWII weren't cigarettes one of the most popular items to barter with? I remember hearing of people who traded master-works paintings for cigarettes.
Buy bottles of alcohol. Those are worth a lot if it comes to a barter economy according to a blog I used to read about hyperinflation in Argentina. They last in your basement, basically forever, if it's vodka or such. And if good times come again, well, hey, you can drink it yourself.
The scars from hyperinflation run deep in Argentines. The money inflated so quickly that the thousand peso bills they printed had to be stamped with 10,000 or even 100,000! Money had to be exchanged into the new denominations. Old bills then became worthless.
Buy food while you can. Actually after WWII weren't cigarettes one of the most popular items to barter with? I remember hearing of people who traded master-works paintings for cigarettes.
Buy bottles of alcohol. Those are worth a lot if it comes to a barter economy according to a blog I used to read about hyperinflation in Argentina. They last in your basement, basically forever, if it's vodka or such. And if good times come again, well, hey, you can drink it yourself.
The scars from hyperinflation run deep in Argentines. The money inflated so quickly that the thousand peso bills they printed had to be stamped with 10,000 or even 100,000! Money had to be exchanged into the new denominations. Old bills then became worthless.
A wine cellar might be a good investment.