•  

Part 1: The Emergence of Money with Lyn Alden - WBD703

0
0

Lyn Alden is a macroeconomist and investment strategist. In this interview, we discuss Lyn’s amazing new book: Broken Money. This show, the first in a series of three shows, delves into the history of money: the concept of money as a ledger, its different forms throughout history, as well as the properties that make a commodity suitable for use as money.

- - - -

One of the key concepts Lyn explores is the idea of money as a ledger, of which there are three main forms: commodity money, governed by the specific properties of the physical commodity being used as money; bank money, which is a ledger governed by nation states and managed by central banks; and, open-source money like Bitcoin, where the ledger is governed by the users, who create and maintain the rules of the system. But how did money develop?

Money emerged as an innovation to solve the problems of barter, where the limitations of the double coincidence of wants and lack of trust between traders made transactions difficult. Money emerged as a liquid accounting system making transactions more efficient. Different cultures used various commodities as forms of money throughout history, including shell beads, cocoa, salt, and furs.

Each type of commodity used as money had unique properties that made them suitable, such as divisibility and the ability for them to be recombined. As technology advanced, people were able to produce more of these commodities, which led to their devaluation. However, two commodities that were difficult to devalue were silver and gold. These precious metals were rarer and had a natural difficulty adjustment, making them more suitable as money.

As important as the technology of money was the evolution of the theory of money. Two competing theories of money emerged: commodity theory and credit theory. Commodity theorists believed that barter was the precursor to money. However, credit as a form of money has been found in modern hunter-gatherer societies and used as an effective way of circumventing the need for commodities as money.

The current paradigm is seeing bank money and credit theory coming under significant strain. Every system controlled by human administrators degrades over time, with most currencies experiencing high inflation or even hyperinflation within a human lifetime. However, despite attempts to find alternatives like the dollar or Bitcoin, nothing quite fills the void left by the local currency. How money broke will be the focus of the next show.

 

Show notes: https://www.whatbitcoindid.com/podcast/the-emergence-of-money

This episode’s sponsors: Iris Energy - Bitcoin Mining. Done Sustainably Ledn - Financial services for Bitcoin hodlers Bitcasino - The Future of Gaming is here Ledger - State of the art Bitcoin hardware wallet Wasabi Wallet - Privacy by default Unchained - Secure your bitcoin with confidence

No comments yet...
Log in to comment
0 0 0
2024-08-30

What Bitcoin Did with Jack Mallers, Matt Odell, & Harry Sudock - WBD859

That’s a wrap! What Bitcoin Did is over, and what better way to close out the podcast than an episod…
0 0 0
2024-08-28

Who Owns Bitcoin with Troy Cross - WBD858

Troy Cross is a Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at Reed College & Chief Editor at The Nakamot…
0 0 0
2024-08-26

Jack Mallers on Why Bitcoin - WBD857

Jack Mallers is the CEO of Strike. In this interview, we discuss debt as time travel, how Jack would…

What Bitcoin Did with Peter McCormack

With What Bitcoin Did, host Peter McCormack talks to experts in the world of Bitcoin, economics and …

Log in to Follow

More episodes from What Bitcoin Did with Peter McCormack

Top Podcasts Top rated Podcasts