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The End of Money

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The End of Money

Counterfeiters, Preachers, Techies, Dreamers – and the Coming Cashless Society

Da Capo Press,

15 Minuten Lesezeit
10 Take-aways
Audio & Text

Was ist drin?

Goodbye cash, hello e-money! Will you miss all those grimy bills and coins?

Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Comprehensive
  • Eloquent

Recommendation

Thanks to credit cards, PayPal, online bill paying and other developments, cash is becoming increasingly passé. Wired editor David Wolman examines all aspects of money to explain why physical currency may be a concept whose time has passed. Though the end of cash may not seem likely at present, getAbstract recommends his take on electronic currency to all those who seek a better understanding of the future direction of money.

Summary

Money Makes the World Go ’Round

Money can take the form of checks, credit cards, computer bits, gift cards and even Disney Dollars. Its most common form is cash: banknotes and coins representing the currency of sovereign nations. Cash has some specific problems. It costs governments money to manufacture money. The US penny and US nickel cost more to manufacture than they are worth. Dollar bills are less expensive to manufacture than coins, but they have a limited shelf life, and thus end up costing more money to produce.

However, because it costs less than $5 to print a five-dollar bill and far less than $20 to print a twenty-dollar bill – this difference between value and manufacturing cost is known as seigniorage – governments profit when they manufacture money. Many coins today are largely useless because inflation devalues them. Some economists and other knowledgeable observers question whether governments should bother minting coins.

Advocates of electronic or digital money would like to get rid of all physical currency. They believe it has outlived its usefulness. Cash critics say hard currency is obsolete for several reasons: Many people do not trust national...

About the Author

David Wolman is a contributing editor for Wired. A former Fulbright journalism scholar in Japan, he has written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Time and Nature.


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