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Money : the true story of a made-up thing

Goldstein, Jacob. (Author).

What is money anyway, and where and why did it originate? According to Jacob Goldstein, this made-up thing has evolved over centuries and takes different forms based on technological advances, the needs of society, and often the crazy ideas of outliers on the fringes. Told through witty, historical anecdotes, Goldstein demystifies this ever-evolving tool from the invention of the first coins in Mesopotamia, to how China invented paper money centuries before it appeared in the west, how at one point in Sweden men carried giant "coins" on their backs to pay for goods, to the gold standard, pound sterling, origins of the Euro, mutual funds, bitcoin and a cashless society. Money presents entertaining tales of fascinating characters who fundamentally changed our monetary systems such as Genghis Khan, John Law, a convicted murderer and professional gambler, the Luddites, and the anarchist cyberpunks who created bitcoin. Through these major movements we see the rise and fall of various financial institutions: central banks, the stock market, the Federal Reserve, and the shadow institutions like Lehman Brothers that helped create the financial crisis of 2008. Lively and accessible and full of interesting tidbits (the word "banker" comes from the Venetian "bench sitters"-or "banchieri"-of the 1600s who guarded the gold) Goldstein looks at the evolution of money (whose definition appears to be, if we all agree it's money, then it is money) and confronts its true purpose and who it is supposed to be for.

Book  - 2020

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Subject
Money > History.
  • ISBN: 9780316417198
  • Physical Description 257 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
  • Edition First edition.
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2020.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 9780316417198
Money : The True Story of a Made-Up Thing
Money : The True Story of a Made-Up Thing
by Goldstein, Jacob
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BookList Review

Money : The True Story of a Made-Up Thing

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

What is money, really? When you pay a dollar bill for a soda, what is actually being traded? Journalist Goldstein became fascinated with money during the 2008 financial crisis when trillions of dollars in wealth disappeared. He moved from the Wall Street Journal's health care beat to the NPR podcast Planet Money and continued to study money. This book, Goldstein's first, traces the history of the concept of money. Goldstein introduces readers to the origins of monetary tokens, the invention of paper money, and the creation of the stock market, with attention to specific details and the people who played major roles. He shows how the evolution of financial systems across the globe did not move in a linear progression, but rather, more often, as a series of experiments. Money brings readers through the role of the Dutch East India Company in the creation of short-selling to the inventions of the euro and bitcoin. Goldstein's entertaining storytelling style makes complicated ideas clear and engaging. Money is a must-read for all those who've ever wondered what their paycheck actually means.

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780316417198
Money : The True Story of a Made-Up Thing
Money : The True Story of a Made-Up Thing
by Goldstein, Jacob
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

Kirkus Review

Money : The True Story of a Made-Up Thing

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

An economic expert chronicles the evolution of money. Goldstein, co-host of NPR's podcast Planet Money, offers a brisk, brightly told history of money, ranging from lumps of metal used in ancient Greek city-states to invisible bitcoin traded online. Money, the author argues convincingly, is "a made-up thing, a shared fiction." He continues, "a pretty good working definition of money is: it's the thing you pay taxes with. In a world where different things are competing to be money--bills of exchange, silver and gold coins, notes from private banks--the thing the government accepts for taxes is going to win." Besides tracing different forms that money has taken, Goldstein introduces a roster of quirky individuals who influenced monetary policy: among them, 17th-century Scotsman John Law, an inveterate gambler cognizant of the probability theory put forth by the "weirdo genius" Blaise Pascal and who powerfully shaped the French economy; Nicholas Biddle, president of America's first central bank (at a time when the U.S. had 8,370 different kinds of paper money), who drew Andrew Jackson's ire; Yale economist Irving Fisher, who redefined the dollar "as a fixed basket of stuff"; and Bruce Bent, inventor of the money-market fund. Goldstein deftly clarifies economic concepts, distinguishing, for example, the real economy ("the carpenter who builds your house") from finance ("the banker who lends you money to buy the house"). Finance, he explains, "matches people who are willing to give up money now for the possibility of more money later with people who need money now and are willing to pay back more money later. Finance moves money around in time." The author also explains the underpinnings of the 2008 financial crisis, the consequences of the adoption of the euro, and the possibilities of money in the future: the disappearance of cash, for one, and the end of banks. An informative primer from a genial guide. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.