P.J. Denyer
Penultimate Amazing
Pfft. Sports cars to display your wealth? Really? I travel through the city in a gold palanquin exclusively carried by Harvard graduates.
Is that you Jacob?
Pfft. Sports cars to display your wealth? Really? I travel through the city in a gold palanquin exclusively carried by Harvard graduates.
Pfft. Sports cars to display your wealth? Really? I travel through the city in a gold palanquin...
...exclusively carried by Harvard graduates.
So you like to go really slow?
Really really slow!
Who cares? It's a question worth debating, so it doesn't matter if the OP returns or not.The OP joined up, created three threads in less than an hour, and has never been back. Feel free to discuss his ideas but don't expect him to join.
You missed the big one - it abstracts the particulars of goods and services, which has the psychological effect of causing people to value money itself. Capitalists go to extreme lengths to amass as much of it as they can, even though it harms the economy and the environment, and even themselves.psionl0 said:The usual characteristics of money are usually defined as:
A unit of accounting.
A medium of exchange.
A measure of value.
A store of value.
Causes
Influx of gold and silver
From an economic viewpoint the discovery of new silver and gold deposits as well as the productivity increase in the silver mining industry perpetuated the price revolution. When precious metals entered Spain, this influx drove up the Spanish price level and caused a balance of payments deficit. This deficit occurred on account of Spanish demand for foreign products exceeding exports to foreign markets. The deficit was financed by the metals that entered these foreign countries and in turn increased their money supply and drove up their price levels.
I would describe that as an effect of money rather than a characteristic.You missed the big one - it abstracts the particulars of goods and services, which has the psychological effect of causing people to value money itself.
Pfft. Sports cars to display your wealth? Really? I travel through the city in a gold palanquin exclusively carried by Harvard graduates.
Who cares? It's a question worth debating, so it doesn't matter if the OP returns or not.
You missed the big one - it abstracts the particulars of goods and services, which has the psychological effect of causing people to value money itself. Capitalists go to extreme lengths to amass as much of it as they can, even though it harms the economy and the environment, and even themselves.
<snip>
Harvard graduates?
Amateur.
My palanquin is exclusively carried by Harvard post-docs...
ok, so to some of you the initial argument makes some sense, let's continue...
The below is quite an unusual argument, any feedback both positive and negative is welcome, but please, keep it classy
Anyway, just to clear things up, I'm not saying that money is BAD or anything. Just that technically it's not NEEDED. It just makes things a lot easier, but that's about it.
I struggle to figure out why some find the concept of money so difficult.ok, so to some of you the initial argument makes some sense, let's continue...
The below is quite an unusual argument, any feedback both positive and negative is welcome, but please, keep it classy![]()
Well, I wouldn't say it's a necessity strictly speaking, seein' as fairly advanced ancient societies managed to work perfectly well before the invention of actual money. Actual currency came VERY late after cities and trade, as in literally thousands of years later. And Egypt managed to work perfectly fine and be an economic powerhouse without using currency internally, even after they were minting coins for foreign trade. If those foreigners are willing to give up valuable goods for gold and silver coins, sure, Egypt had the precious metal mines and was willing to stamp it into coins. But it obviously wasn't NECESSARY to keep its internal market going.
And then there were the Chinese, which pretty much just abstracted everything to quantities of bronze. Now technically it's money, but unlike gold, you didn't have to believe that it has a certain value. It was actual bronze you could use for weapons, tools, statues, whatever. And people did use it like that. Or conversely you occasionally see stuff like Dong Zhuo melting bronze statues to pay his troops during the Three Kingdoms civil war.
Basically it was a bit of a hybrid. It worked as money all right, but it was also a good that was useful by itself.
Anyway, just to clear things up, I'm not saying that money is BAD or anything. Just that technically it's not NEEDED. It just makes things a lot easier, but that's about it.