2. Money
Money is a good that acts as a medium of exchange
in transactions. It is a way for a person to trade
what he has for what he wants.
3. Barter
• It is the way of exchanging goods and services
• In 9000BC people would barter goods they had in
surplus for ones they lacked
4. Shells
• Coastal regions around the Indian Ocean saw the use of
cowrie shells in trade as early as 1200BC
5. Coinage
• In 1100BC, Chinese people started using small replicas of
goods cast from bronze
• Largely for practical reasons these developed into rounded
“coins”
• Those coins had holes in the middle, so they could easily
carry around their neck
6. • In 600BC the first “official” coin was minted by king Alayttes
of Lydia (modern day Turkey)
• Greeks and Persians quickly adopted useful new technique of
metal currency
• By the end of the 6th century coinage is common throughout
the region
7. Leather
• In 118BC, banknotes in the form of leather money
were used in China
• They were made out of deer skin
8. Paper money
• the first known paper banknotes appeared in
China in 9th century
• The travels of Marco Polo to China introduced the
idea of paper money to Europe
9. Wampum currency
• beads of polished shells strung in strands, belts,
or sashes and used by North American Indians as
money
10. Gold standard
• Gold was officially made the standard of value in
England in 1816.
• “Gold standard Act” of 1900: Gold became an
official instrument of payment
11. Plastic Money
• John Biggins invented “charge-it” card, the first
credit card
• In this 21st century this currency is widely being
used
12. Types of money
Commodity Money:
Whenever any commodity is used for the exchange purpose,
the commodity becomes equivalent to the money and is called
commodity money.
Ex: tea, sugar, shells, tobacco etc
Fiat Money:
Fiat currency is the kind of money which don’t have any
intrinsic value and it can’t converted into valuable resource.
Ex: coins, paper money
13. Fractional Money
It is a hybrid type of money which is partly backed by a
commodity and has a fiat money transaction purpose. If the
commodity loses its value then Fractional money converts
into Fiat money.
Fiduciary Money
Whenever, any bank assures the customers to pay in
different types of money and when the customer can sell the
promise or transfer it to somebody else, it is called the
fiduciary money.
14. Catagory of money
Narrow Money
M0
M0 is material currency (cash itself); all notes, coins, specie
and bearer certificates convertible on demand
M1
M1 includes M0 plus the balance of all deposit accounts
which can be instantly converted into cash of equal value
Broad Money
M2
M2 includes M1 plus short-term time deposits in banks and
24-hour money market funds
M3
M3 includes M2 plus longer-term time deposits and money
market funds with more than 24-hour maturity
16. Functions of money
Medium of exchange
Unit of value
Standard of differed payments
Store of value
Basis of the credit system
Equalizer of marginal utilities and productivities