NCERTCh 11Free

From Barter to Money

🎓 Class 7📖 Exploring Society India and Beyond Part-I📖 7 notes⏱️ ~11 min

From Barter to MoneyStudy Notes

NCERT-aligned · 7 notes · 3 shown free

From Barter to Money

Explanation

From Barter to Money

This chapter begins with a quote from John Maynard Keynes highlighting the importance of money as a link between the present and the future. It introduces the fundamental questions about how exchange took place before money, why money came into existence, and how money has transformed over time. The chapter recalls the theme 'Tapestry of the Past' where people grew crops or made goods like carnelian beads and exchanged them. It prompts the reader to think about how such goods were exchanged in the absence of money. The earliest form of exchange was the barter system, where goods and services were exchanged directly without the use of money. For example, if someone needed a pencil and had an extra eraser, and another person had an extra pencil but needed an eraser, they could exchange these items directly. This system was prevalent worldwide and involved commodities such as cowrie shells, salt, tea, tobacco, cloth, cattle, and seeds. The chapter also shows examples of different forms of money used historically in various parts of the world, such as Rai stones in Micronesia, copper Tajadero in Central America, and red feather coils in the Solomon Islands. These examples illustrate the diversity of objects used as money before the modern monetary system.

  • Barter system is the direct exchange of goods and services without money.
  • Money is a common tool accepted by all for payments.
  • Barter involved commodities like cowrie shells, salt, cattle, seeds, etc.
  • Examples of non-metallic money include Rai stones, copper knives, and feather coils.
  • Barter was the earliest form of exchange globally.
  • Money evolved to solve limitations of barter.
  • 📌 Barter System: A method of exchanging goods and services directly without money.
  • 📌 Money: A common medium accepted by everyone for payment.
  • 📌 Transaction: An act of buying or selling between people.

Why Do we Need Money?

Explanation

Why Do we Need Money?

This section explores the difficulties faced in the barter system through the story of a farmer who wants to exchange an ox for various goods such as shoes, sweaters, and medicines. The farmer must find someone who wants an ox and then exchange it for other goods, often through multiple transactions. This highlights the problem of double coincidence of wants, where two people must have exactly what the other wants at the same time for barter to work. Other problems include the lack of a common standard measure of value, making it hard to decide how much of one good equals another. The farmer also faces the problem of divisibility, as an ox cannot be divided to buy smaller items, and portability, as carrying an ox or large quantities of goods is difficult. Durability is another issue, as goods like wheat can spoil or be eaten by rats if stored for long. These problems illustrate why money was needed as a common medium of exchange, a store of value, and a standard of deferred payment. The section also mentions that barter still exists today in some places, such as the Junbeel Mela in Assam, where people exchange local products and handmade goods without money.

  • Barter requires double coincidence of wants, which is rare.
  • No common measure of value makes exchange difficult.
  • Divisibility problem: some goods cannot be divided.
  • Portability problem: carrying goods like ox or wheat is hard.
  • Durability problem: perishable goods spoil over time.
  • Money solves these problems by acting as a medium of exchange.
  • 📌 Double Coincidence of Wants: When two people each want what the other has.
  • 📌 Common Standard Measure of Value: A unit to compare worth of goods.
  • 📌 Divisibility: Ability to divide goods into smaller parts.

Basic Functions of Money

Explanation

Basic Functions of Money

Money emerged as a solution to the problems of barter. It acts as a common medium of exchange accepted by all, making trade easier and faster. Money also serves as a store of value, allowing people to save and use it later without losing worth, unlik