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Easy Money

American Puritans and the Invention of Modern Currency

Dror Goldberg

$90.95

Hardback

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English
University of Chicago Press
22 June 2023
A sweeping history of the American invention of modern money.

Economists endlessly debate the nature of legal tender monetary systems—coins and bills issued by a government or other authority. Yet the origins of these currencies have received little attention.

Dror Goldberg tells the story of modern money in North America through the Massachusetts colony during the seventeenth century. As the young settlement transitioned to self-governance and its economy grew, the need to formalize a smooth exchange emerged. Printing local money followed.

Easy Money illustrates how colonists invented contemporary currency by shifting its foundation from intrinsically valuable goods—such as silver—to the taxation of the state. Goldberg traces how this structure grew into a worldwide system in which, monetarily, we are all Massachusetts. Weaving economics, law, and American history, Easy Money is a new touchstone in the story of monetary systems.

By:  
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   626g
ISBN:   9780226825106
ISBN 10:   0226825108
Series:   Markets and Governments in Economic History
Pages:   360
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Preface   Part I. Introductions Chapter 1. Introduction to the Book Chapter 2. Money and Its Inventions: Theoretical Considerations Chapter 3. England in the Late Sixteenth Century Chapter 4. English Developments, 1584–1692   Part II. The Atlantic Chapter 5. Before 1630: Harvesters of Money Chapter 6. The Puritan Exodus, 1629–1640: General Features Chapter 7. Massachusetts Takes the Monetary Lead, 1630–1640 Chapter 8. A New Hope, 1640–1660 Chapter 9. The Empire Strikes Back, 1660–1686 Chapter 10. Governments and Paper Money Projects, 1685–1689 Chapter 11. The Massachusetts Legislator: The Case of Elisha Hutchinson Chapter 12. The Return of the General Court, 1689–1690 Summary of Part II   Part III. A Monetary Revolution Chapter 13. The Legal Tender Law, 1690 Chapter 14. Aftermath, 1691–1692 Chapter 15. Back to England’s Financial Revolution, 1692–1700 Chapter 16. Analysis Chapter 17. Conclusion Notes References Index

Dror Goldberg is a senior faculty member in the Department of Management and Economics at the Open University of Israel. 

Reviews for Easy Money: American Puritans and the Invention of Modern Currency

Easy Money provides an engrossing narrative account of this lesser-known crucible. Although scholarship about the first American colonies could fill the Mayflower, Mr. Goldberg's chronicle is the first book-length attempt to explain why a defining concept in our global financial system emerged within a desperate theocracy on the fringes of the British Empire. * The Wall Street Journal * Paper money and legal tender clauses did not emerge in a vacuum. Easy Money tells how exigencies, forethoughts, and experiments combined to make an early paper money sustainable and valuable-at least for a while. Full of insights about the 21st century brought from carefully interpreting 17th century events, Easy Money is a fascinating mixture of American political, economic, and intellectual history that is sharply focused on how paper money was invented and implemented. -- Thomas Sargent | New York University | recipient of 2011 Nobel Prize in Economics Skillfully assembling a large body of evidence in this ambitious work, Goldberg has woven a complex, yet accessible narrative about an important event in monetary history, which tackles important questions such as: How does money evolve? What explains the timing, location, and form of monetary invention? And why Massachusetts? -- Jane Knodell | University of Vermont It is often said that money is a social construct. But few of us take the time to painstakingly chronicle the political, economic, and social processes by which it is constructed. In Easy Money, Dror Goldberg traces the story of modern legal tender currency back to its 17th century Transatlantic roots and the upstart colony of Massachusetts. It is a story of war, politics, law, religion, and circumstance in which necessity reveals itself as the mother of monetary invention. It is also a story with important lessons for the future of money. -- Dan Awrey | Cornell University Easy Money is the story of one of history's great inventions in a depth that no one has done before. The outlines of this story have been known for quite a while, but no one has explained in Goldberg's rich detail how the 1690-1692 innovation happened when and where it did. -- Richard Sylla | New York University


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