Making Money: Coin, Currency, and the Coming of Capitalism

Making Money: Coin, Currency, and the Coming of Capitalism

by Christine Desan
Making Money: Coin, Currency, and the Coming of Capitalism

Making Money: Coin, Currency, and the Coming of Capitalism

by Christine Desan

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Overview

Money travels the modern world in disguise. It looks like a convention of human exchange - a commodity like gold or a medium like language. But its history reveals that money is a very different matter. It is an institution engineered by political communities to mark and mobilize resources. As societies change the way they create money, they change the market itself - along with the rules that structure it, the politics and ideas that shape it, and the benefits that flow from it.
One particularly dramatic transformation in money's design brought capitalism to England. For centuries, the English government monopolized money's creation. The Crown sold people coin for a fee in exchange for silver and gold. 'Commodity money' was a fragile and difficult medium; the first half of the book considers the kinds of exchange and credit it invited, as well as the politics it engendered. Capitalism arrived when the English reinvented money at the end of the 17th century. When it established the Bank of England, the government shared its monopoly over money creation for the first time with private investors, institutionalizing their self-interest as the pump that would produce the money supply. The second half of the book considers the monetary revolution that brought unprecedented possibilities and problems. The invention of circulating public debt, the breakdown of commodity money, the rise of commercial bank currency, and the coalescence of ideological commitments that came to be identified with the Gold Standard - all contributed to the abundant and unstable medium that is modern money. All flowed as well from a collision between the individual incentives and public claims at the heart of the system. The drama had constitutional dimension: money, as its history reveals, is a mode of governance in a material world. That character undermines claims in economics about money's neutrality. The monetary design innovated in England would later spread, producing the global architecture of modern money.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780198709589
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 09/14/2015
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 460
Sales rank: 693,630
Product dimensions: 6.70(w) x 9.50(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Christine Desan, Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law, Harvard Law School

Christine A. Desan is the Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. She teaches about the international monetary system, the constitutional law of money, constitutional history, political economy, and legal theory. She is the co-founder of Harvard's Program on the Study of Capitalism; with its co-director, Professor Sven Beckert (History), she has taught the Program's anchoring research seminar, the Workshop on the Political Economy of Modern Capitalism, since 2005. Desan's research explores money as a legal and political project, one that configures the market it sets out to measure.

Table of Contents

Introduction1. Creation Stories2. From Metal to Money: Producing the "Just Penny"3. Commodity Money as an Extreme Sport: Flows, Famines, Debasements, and Imitation Pennies4. The High Politics of Money: Strong Coin, Heavy Taxes, and the English Invention of Public Credit5. The Social Stratigraphy of Coin and Credit in Late Medieval England6. Priming the Pump: The Sovereign Path Towards Paying for Coin and Circulating Credit7. Interests, Rights, and the Currency of Public Debt8. Reinventing Money: The Beginning of Bank Currency9. Re-theorizing Money: The Struggle over Money in the Modern Imagination10. The Eighteenth Century Architecture of Modern MoneyEpilogue: The Gold Standard in an Era of InconvertibilityConclusion: From Blood to WaterBibliography
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