Who Is Author Adam Fergusson?

United States dollar melting

If you have spent any time reading about money, inflation, or economic history, you may have come across a book called When Money Dies. It is one of the most frequently recommended titles in personal finance and investing circles, and its author, Adam Fergusson, is someone worth knowing more about. Understanding who he is and why he wrote this book can help you appreciate what makes it such a lasting and important read.

Early Life and Education

Adam Dugdale Fergusson was born on July 10, 1932, in Haddington, Scotland, into a well-connected family. His father was Sir James Fergusson, the 8th Baronet of Kilkerran. Fergusson was educated at Eton College and later attended Trinity College at the University of Cambridge, where he studied history and completed his degree in 1955. That foundation in history would shape the way he approached economic events for the rest of his life, treating them not as abstract data points but as human stories with real consequences.

A Career in Journalism

After Cambridge, Fergusson built a career as a journalist. He worked at the Glasgow Herald from 1957 to 1961, then served as Foreign Editor of the Statist, an economics and business magazine, from 1964 until it closed in 1967. He later joined The Times as a feature writer, focusing on politics, economics, and the environment, a role he held for roughly a decade. This period gave him both the analytical training and the storytelling instincts that would define his most important work.

Writing When Money Dies

Fergusson began researching what would become When Money Dies in 1973, a moment when the global economy was being rattled by the first major oil shock. Inflation in the United Kingdom was running around 10 percent at the time he started writing and was approaching 25 percent by the time the book was published in 1975. The subject matter felt urgent.

The book chronicles the hyperinflation that destroyed the German mark during the Weimar Republic in the early 1920s, culminating in the catastrophic collapse of 1923. By December of that year, the exchange rate had reached one U.S. dollar for 4.2 trillion marks. Citizens watched their life savings become worthless. Basic goods were traded in place of currency. Social norms broke down alongside the money supply.

What sets Fergusson apart from a dry economic historian is his method. He drew on diaries, personal letters, diplomatic dispatches, and contemporary accounts to show how inflation felt at the human level, not just how it looked in the data. The book treats inflation as a moral and political crisis, not merely a financial one, and argues that when a currency fails, trust in institutions and in each other tends to fail alongside it.

First published by W. Kimber, When Money Dies was largely out of print for decades. That changed after the 2008 financial crisis, when readers began seeking out explanations for what had gone wrong and what could go wrong in the future. Copies were reportedly selling on eBay for close to $1,000. PublicAffairs reissued the book in 2010, and it became widely read again after being associated with praise from investor Warren Buffett. Since then it has remained in circulation as a go-to text for anyone who wants to understand the relationship between monetary policy and societal stability.



Life in Politics and Beyond

In the late 1970s, Fergusson entered politics as a member of the Conservative Party. He was elected to the European Parliament in 1979, representing West Strathclyde, and served until 1984. During that time he acted as spokesperson for the European Democratic Group on political affairs and was active on issues related to Eastern Europe and Soviet policy. After leaving Parliament, he served as a Special Adviser to Geoffrey Howe at the Foreign Office on European affairs from 1984 to 1989, and went on to work as a consultant for international companies including Time Warner, Mitsubishi, and Richemont.

Beyond his most famous book, Fergusson published five books in total, including three novels and a work called The Sack of Bath (1973), a non-fiction account of the demolition of historic Georgian architecture in the city of Bath. He is also an honorary vice-president of the Bath Preservation Trust. He lives in London.

Why His Work Matters for Personal Finance

When Money Dies is not a budgeting guide or a how-to manual. It does not tell you which budgeting app to download or how to set up automatic savings transfers. But it does something more foundational: it explains what money is, what happens when it stops being trustworthy, and why protecting your purchasing power matters over the long run.

Reading books on money means more than absorbing tips and tactics. The best financial education includes understanding history, because history shows you the range of what is possible. Fergusson’s account of Weimar Germany is a case study in what happens when governments spend beyond their means, print money without restraint, and lose the confidence of the people who depend on their currency. The lessons apply to any era.

For anyone building wealth steadily over time, whether through index funds, high-yield savings accounts, or short-term treasury bills, When Money Dies serves as a reminder of why those strategies exist in the first place. Inflation is always in the background of every financial decision. Fergusson helps you understand it at its most extreme, so that a more moderate version of it never catches you off guard.

A Journalist Who Changed How People Think About Inflation

Adam Fergusson is not a household name in the way that some personal finance authors are. He has no podcast, no social media presence, and no celebrity following. What he has is a single, carefully researched book that has outlasted the era in which it was written and become more relevant with each passing financial crisis. That is a rare kind of credibility. If you have not read When Money Dies, it belongs on your list. If you have, it is worth reading again.