An investigation of social and credit theory of money focusing on regional and crypto currencies
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15133/j.ijccr.2020.014Keywords:
chartalism, monetary sovereignty, means of payment, crypto currency, social creditAbstract
This paper explores the fundamental importance of sociality to monetary sovereignty, investigating the apparent contrast between the state and the market in theories of money. Sociality deserves attention given the recent increase since the 1990s of denationalised, regional and, more recently, crypto currencies, which are different from legal tender. First, we examine the classification of metalism and chartalism, that is, the commodity theory of money on one hand and the chartal theory of money on the other (Section 2). The former has been dominant in the history of economic thought, focussing on catallactics, or the function of money as a medium of exchange, while the latter lays more importance on the function of money as a means of payment and relies on literature in history and anthropology. We then concentrate on the meaning of the institution of payment and debt, with which a person can participate in the society to which he/she belongs (Section 3). People’s belief in the perpetual validity of this institution is indispensable for monetary sovereignty. Further, we investigate the idea of the social credit given a hundred years ago, when the trust in this institution and the state itself was severely lacking, as an important application of the sociality of money. In conclusion, we show that sociality among people, embodied in the existence of monies and currencies, cannot be reduced to the market nor to the state.Downloads
Published
30.06.2020
Issue
Section
Articles
License
Copyright (c) 2020 Chikako Nakayama, Manabu Kuwata

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.