lightbrave wrote:However, I didn't get an answer to my question about the duration of the event. I was at about 13% I think. Will it go back to 13% after the event is done?
DrPostman wrote:I've always felt like that event should not be triggered if the war is going well. Say moral
is at or near 100.
Citizen X wrote:DrPostman wrote:I've always felt like that event should not be triggered if the war is going well. Say moral
is at or near 100.
If you are cunning or lucky enough to carry the CSA into 64 you shouldn't complain about the inconvenience :P
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The Confederate Currency Reform Act reduced the money supply in the Eastern Confederacy. The Confederate government passed this Reform Act of 1864 in an effort to stem the rampant inflation ravaging the South. The Act effectively removed one-third of all currency in the South from circulation by mandating that all large denomination bills be converted to 4 percent Treasury bonds before April 1, 1864 and by imposing a 3-to-2 redemption ratio for small bills after the deadline. As people tried to get rid of their large notes in the months prior to the deadline, inflation rose to 23 percent a month. In the summer of 1864, however, price levels in the Confederacy finally stabilized. In the face of continuing pressure to meet war obligations, Congress eventually authorized the printing of an additional 275 million, mostly reversing the effects of the reform.
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