15 research outputs found

    ‘Neutrality: Atlantic Shipping in and after the Anglo-Dutch Wars’

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    Debating Sound Money in Early Modern Europe: From Dualist to Metallic Monetary Systems

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    International audienceIn this paper, we present the monetary debates in Europe from the XVIth to the XVIIIth centuries from the viewpoint of the problem of good and sound money. The framework of the paper is built on a typology of monetary systems, by which a dualist system is distinguished from a metallic one. Under the dualist system, the value in units of account of the specie in circulation was defined by monetary proclamations (Einaudi locates this era from Charlemagne to the French Revolution). Metallist proponents aimed at preventing any kind of manipulations with a radical transformation of the system of payment, which gave birth to a metallic monetary system from the very end of the XVIIth century. The purpose here is not to propose an evolutionary view of monetary systems, which would reduce history to stages to be superseded by the advent of some higher stage; we wish to work on the difficulties of monetary systems and their interweaving, which partake of evolving forms of pluralistic money. Eventually, the advent of an era of monetary stability was a necessary precondition for an effective and sound credit system to develop, which in turn proved to be a pre-condition for the deployment of industrial capitalism—what has been called the ‘monetary revolution’

    The view from the ground

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    Providing an orientation to this edited collection, the introduction considers the nature of money as an object and sign of value. It explores the communicative possibilities of money and financial exchange in the context of everyday routine activities. Mooney and Sifaki explain that the following chapters pay attention to how money is used by people to do things. It introduces the four parts of the book: Childhood, Money and the Everyday, Media and What is Money? The chapter then provides a possible framework for analysing the different meanings that attach to human monetary exchanges. Based on Jakobson’s six functions of language, and treating a transaction as the prototypical financial communicative event, the authors outline six corresponding functions for money
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