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Section 1 The Evolution of Money
Chapter 11 Section 1 The Evolution of Money
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The Evolution of Money Before today’s currency, people practiced a barter economy – a moneyless system that relied on trade People traded fish, milk, shoes, anything valuable
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The 3 Functions of Money 1. Medium of Exchange – something accepted as payment 2. Measure of Value – a common denominator that can be used to express worth 3. Store of Value –property that allows people to be saved until later
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Money in Early Societies
*Money made life easier so people used whatever was scarce in their area*
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Commodity Money – money that has an alternative use as a good or commodity (tea leaves, peppercorn)
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Fiat Money – money used by government decree (order)
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Money in Colonial America
Gunpowder, musket balls, and corn were used as commodity money
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Money in Colonial America
Continental dollars were printed to finance the Revolutionary War Specie – money in the form of coins made from silver and gold
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Characteristics of Money
Portability Durability Divisibility Limited Availability
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CURRENCY TYPE: Limited Availability? Portable? Divisible? Durable? Culture of the Society 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
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Parmesan Cheese: Ancient Italy
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Coins: Roman Empire
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Cocoa Bean: Early Mexican and Central American Societies
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Potlatch (Gift Giving): Native Americans
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Fur Skins: Ancient Russia
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Ensuba (Potato Masher): Ancient Cameroon
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The Dollar: AMERICA!
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Early Banking and Monetary Standards
Section 2: Early Banking and Monetary Standards
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Monetary Standard The mechanism designed to keep the money portable, durable, divisible, and limited in supply
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Currency in the United States
Continental Dollars Private Bank Notes Greenbacks National Bank Notes Gold & Silver Certificates Treasury Coin Notes Modern Federal Reserve Notes
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Growth of State Banking
State Banks – banks that operate from state government At first, most state banks printed only the amount of currency they could reasonably back with their gold and silver reserves
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Problems With Currency
Each bank issued its own form of money Banks could print more money whenever it wanted
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The Greenback Standard
During the Civil War, Congress wanted to make one standard monetary unit United States Notes – a new federal fiat paper currency that had no gold or silver backing
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Alexander Hamilton - Founder Thomas Jefferson – against it
National Currency To make sure greenbacks would not become worthless, the U.S. created a National Bank to keep things uniform Alexander Hamilton - Founder Thomas Jefferson – against it
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The Gold Standard A monetary standard where the basic currency unit is equal to a specific amount of gold Advantages: people felt more secure prevented the government from printing too much money Disadvantages: gold stock might not grow fast enough (the price of gold might not change dramatically over time)
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The Development of Modern Banking
Section 3: The Development of Modern Banking
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Federal Reserve System – 1913, the nation’s first true central bank
Central Bank – a bank that can lend to other banks in times of need
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The Federal Reserve System
For membership in the Fed, all national banks were required to become “members” (part owners) The Fed was organized as a corporation – hopeful members had to purchase shares of stock in the system
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The Federal Reserve It is privately owned, but the Fed is publically controlled… The president appoints with congressional approval Federal Reserve Notes – paper currency issued by the Fed
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The Great Depression During this time, banks did not have deposit insurance for their customers Customers rushed to withdraw their funds, called a run on the bank
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Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
FDIC –insures customer deposits in the event of a bank failure
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Other Depository Institutions
Savings banks Credit Unions
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Dealing with Failed Banks
Bank failures were also an issue in the 1980’s FDIC can seize the bank and either sell it to a stronger bank or liquidate it and pay off the depositors This worked for any bank – S&L’s, commercial banks, etc.
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US Currency Timeline Create a timeline and label each of the different types of currency used in the United States. For each currency be sure to label: The time period it was used If it had any faults or problems If it was backed by any guarantee
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Explain your answer in at least one PARAGRAPH.
As seen in the video clip, more and more societies are switching to electronic currency (credit cards). Consider the 4 characteristics needed for money to be successful. Do you think using electronic currency is a smart or risky idea? Why? What are the pros and cons to electronic currency? What does this tell us about our culture? Explain your answer in at least one PARAGRAPH.
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