City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

A quick history of money, from bartering to Bitcoin, Clive Gifford and Rob Flowers

Label
A quick history of money, from bartering to Bitcoin, Clive Gifford and Rob Flowers
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
A quick history of money
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
Clive Gifford and Rob Flowers
Sub title
from bartering to Bitcoin
Summary
Why is a £5 note worth £5? Where do coins come from? What do banks actually do? All this and so much more is answered in A Quick History of Money, a crash course from cash cows to cryptocurrency. Money might sound all grown-up and serious, but the history of buying, selling, saving and stealing is full of crazy stories and unbelievable facts. A Quick History of Money is here to show you the silly side, as well as give you the lowdown on the important stuff like interest, stocks and shares and wealth inequality. You will discover: how the earliest societies got by without a penny in their pockets; why gold gets all the glory; how the first banks started making money from money; who invented the first banknotes and the concept of 'fiat' money; the craziest money-making cons of all time, from shaving coins to selling the Eiffel Tower... twice; how wealth is measured in the modern-day; history's most expensive money mistakes; what money might look like in the future; great tips for slick saving and smart spending. Plus, read about the world's weirdest wonga, from the four-tonne stones used as currency on the island of Yap, to teacups and sea shells in ancient Asia, to beaver pelts in colonial Canada. Learn how hyperinflation leads to some mind-blowing money maths, like the Bitcoins used to buy two pizzas in 2010 that would be worth £75 million today. Test your knowhow with a quiz at the back of the book. Packed with facts and jokes, the latest in the Quick Histories series takes us on a chronological tour from cashless societies to... cashless societies, proving that while it might make the world go round, money sure is funny
Target audience
juvenile
Classification
Contributor
Illustrator
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