Photo credit Jimi Filipovski

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How Money Really Works

And why bitcoin won’t solve the fundamental problems

Blake Gossard
10 min readFeb 13, 2018

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When I was eight or nine years old, I would wash farm equipment for my dad, and he paid me a few dollars. I also used to pick up rocks from our fields for money. (Rocks in fields can really screw up a plow, so someone has to pick them up). I disliked these menial jobs, but I did them without hesitation because doing so was one of the few ways I could attain money.

This mindset is as far as most people’s understanding of money ever gets. Work to acquire money to acquire what we want and need. And while we’re all beholden to a far more nuanced and discomforting psychology underlying money, few of us realize it.

As I began to accumulate wealth throughout my twenties, I slowly learned what money really is. It’s not a “store of value,” as many think. Money is a measure of everyone else’s indebtedness to the person who holds it.

The more money you have, the more everyone else owes you.

This concept is hard to accept, even for many modern economists. To begin to grasp this idea, we need to take a brief look at the origins of money.

Let there be money

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Blake Gossard
Blake Gossard

Written by Blake Gossard

Critically Thinking & Typewriter Tinkering

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