The Story of Money
From Barter to Central Banks and the Dollar Era
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Geraldo Leal
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Money did not begin with coins, paper notes, or central banks. It began with obligation, record-keeping, and trust — long before gold was minted or currencies were printed.
This book traces the full evolution of money, from barter economies and early debt systems to the rise of central banking, the gold standard, Bretton Woods, and the emergence of the dollar as the dominant global currency.
It examines how coinage reshaped political authority, how metallic standards imposed discipline, why the gold regime ultimately broke, and how the 1971 end of convertibility transformed the modern monetary system. The book also explains the mechanics of fiat money, credit expansion, inflation, financial crises, and the growing role of central banks in managing liquidity and stability.
The structure of the dollar system — including reserve currency status, U.S. Treasury markets, global settlement networks, and petrodollar flows — is analyzed with clarity and precision.
Finally, the book explores the future of money, from cryptocurrencies and algorithmic scarcity to central bank digital currencies and the foundations of monetary trust.
More than a chronological account, this is a structural examination of how monetary regimes function, why they collapse, and what ultimately sustains confidence in money.