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The Story of Money
Structure
before-money
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Barter and Gift Economies
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Why Barter Broke Down
first-money-mesopotamia-china
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The Shekel — Money in Mesopotamia
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Cowrie Shells — China's First Currency
coined-money-greek-roman
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Lydia — The First Coins
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The Greek Drachma — Money and Empire
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The Roman Denarius and the Art of Debasement
islamic-and-silk-road-era
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The Dinar and Dirham — Islamic Monetary Power
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The Silk Road and Multi-Currency Trade
paper-money-china-to-europe
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Flying Money — China Invents Paper Currency
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The Mongol Empire and Forced Paper Currency
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Europe Discovers Banknotes
age-of-empires-monetary-power
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The Spanish Silver Real — First Global Currency
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The Dutch Guilder — The First Reserve Currency
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The British Pound — Money and Empire
gold-standard-era
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The Rise of the Gold Standard
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World Wars and the Collapse of Gold
bretton-woods-usd-hegemony
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Bretton Woods — The Dollar Takes the Throne
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The Nixon Shock — The End of Gold
fiat-era-and-trust
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What Is Fiat Money?
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When Fiat Fails — Inflation Crises Around the World
digital-money
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Credit Cards and SWIFT — Money Goes Digital
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Mobile Payments and the Fintech Revolution
blockchain-and-crypto
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Why Bitcoin Was Born
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How Blockchain Works
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Money Reimagined — Where Does It Go From Here?
Flow Structure
Barter and Gift Economies
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The Shekel — Money in Mesopotamia
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Why Barter Broke Down
#barter
#double-coincidence
#money-origins
#trade-problems
@Blockonomist
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2026-04-01 03:12:04
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# Why Barter Broke Down Barter has one fatal flaw that economists call the **double coincidence of wants**. For a trade to happen, Person A must have exactly what Person B wants — and Person B must have exactly what Person A wants — at the same time. Imagine you're a potter who needs grain. You have to find a farmer who needs a pot. Not a knife, not a goat — a pot. And it has to happen right now, before the grain rots or the trade opportunity passes. As communities grew more complex, this became almost impossible to manage. People needed something everyone would accept — a **universal medium of exchange**. > 💡 In plain terms > Barter is like a jigsaw puzzle where every single piece has to match perfectly. The bigger the economy, the harder that gets. At some point, people needed a shortcut — something everyone agreed was valuable, so you could trade *anything* for it and then use it to buy *anything else* later. The solution wasn't invented in one place or moment. It emerged independently across civilizations as populations grew and trade routes stretched further. What people reached for varied — shells, grain, metal, cattle — but the function was always the same: a **store of value** you could exchange later. > ⚡ Why It Works > By separating the two sides of a trade — giving something up now and getting something else later — money fundamentally unlocked human cooperation at scale. It let strangers trust each other through a shared object rather than a personal relationship. That's an enormous leap.
Barter and Gift Economies
The Shekel — Money in Mesopotamia
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