Long before coins, people simply traded one thing for another. It worked — until it really didn't.
In a barter world you swap what you have for what you want. But for any deal to happen, the other person must want exactly what you're offering, right now, in the right amount. Economists call this the double coincidence of wants — and it makes trade slow, clumsy, and often impossible. Money fixes it by being one thing everybody accepts.
Barter needs a perfect match. Money removes the need for one.
Both sides must want what the other offers, at the same time. Rare.
You can't save your wealth as fish for next year — it spoils.
Every man thus lives by exchanging, and the society itself grows to be what is properly a commercial society.— Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations
Before coins, money was simply whatever a community agreed to trust — and some of the choices were strange.
The earliest money was just useful or rare things everyone accepted: cattle, salt, grain, and above all gold and silver — prized everywhere because they are scarce, durable, and never rot. Roman soldiers were sometimes paid in salt — the root of the word salary.
All accepted for the same reason: everyone agreed they had value.
Hard to fake, didn't rot quickly, and everyone wanted them.
From the Latin salarium — a soldier's allowance, linked to salt.
Money — the word traces to the Roman temple of Juno Moneta, where Rome struck its coins. The goddess’s name gave us both "money" and "mint."
Money is a matter of functions four: a medium, a measure, a standard, a store.— Traditional economics rhyme
A banknote is only paper. It has value because everyone believes it does — and when that belief breaks, money dies.
Modern money isn't backed by gold. It works purely on trust: trust that others will accept it tomorrow for the same value as today. When a government prints too much and that trust collapses, you get hyperinflation — prices doubling in days, or even hours.
Illustrative: the cash needed to buy one loaf of bread as confidence collapses.
Hungary, 1946: prices doubled roughly every 15 hours — the worst ever.
Money is only worth what people believe it's worth tomorrow.
Hungary, 1946: how often prices doubled at the peak — the fastest a currency has ever died.
Money is trust inscribed.— Niall Ferguson, The Ascent of Money
A trading port at the crossroads of the world ran on a jumble of foreign coins — long before it had its own.
In the 1800s, Singapore's docks took Spanish and Mexican silver dollars, Indian rupees and Chinese coins all at once. Order came slowly: the Straits dollar, then the Malayan dollar, and finally — in 1967 — the Singapore dollar, issued by Singapore's own currency board.
A port that slowly built a currency of its own.
Since 1967 the Singapore and Brunei dollars trade 1:1 — still true today.
Traders from everywhere meant coins from everywhere, side by side.
For a century, Singapore’s docks ran on Spanish silver dollars struck in Mexico — hard money with no home government, trusted simply because everyone accepted it.
In one lifetime, money has gone from coins in your hand to a number that moves with a tap.
First came cards, then chips, then phones. In Singapore you can go for days touching no cash at all — NETS (Network for Electronic Transfers), PayNow and PayLah! move money instantly between phones. The cash didn't disappear; it just turned into data.
Each step made money faster, lighter, and more invisible.
The same dollars, now just numbers moving between accounts.
A tap only works because everyone trusts the number is real.
Share of payments in Singapore now made without cash — among the highest on earth.
Banking is necessary, banks are not.— Bill Gates, 1994