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Money is something we trade for what we want to
buy. Even in 10,000 B.C., people were looking for a way to
buy what they needed and sell what they had. This became
bartering. Bartering is the trading of one thing for an
equal value of something else. For example: if you
had an I-Pod that you didn’t want anymore and your friend had a
really good baseball card collection that he didn’t want, you
could trade. The first things that you would need to know
are:
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How much is the I-Pod worth to you? |
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How much is the baseball card collection worth to you? |
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How much is the I-Pod worth to your friend? |
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How much is the card collection worth to your friend? |
From there, you need to
negotiate.
We all know that an I-Pod is expensive but your friend’s baseball card
collection might have rookie cards in it which are more valuable than
regular ones. You might end up making a trade that includes your I-Pod
for part of the baseball card collection. At the end of the trade, both
you and your friend need to be satisfied that the trade is fair.
Bartering is not always the answer for getting what people
need. From our example above, if you and your friend hadn’t had
something that each of you wanted, then the trade wouldn’t have worked.
Both people have to have something that the other wants. In Colonial
times, a person might have had corn he grew and wanted to get beef for
it. Unless he found someone who had beef and wanted corn, he was out of
luck.
When people started to use coins and paper money that had
certain values, the value was based on the amount of gold or silver in
it (coins) or specified on it (paper money). In the U.S., there were
dollars that said “Gold certificate” and “Silver certificate” on them.
This meant that you could take them to the bank and trade them in for
gold or silver. A $10.00 gold certificate would be worth $10.00 in
gold.
The most important thing to recognize when you talk about
money is that money can be anything as long as a value has been given to
it. It doesn’t have to be paper or coins. Wampum, which were chains of
shells, was money to Native Americans. Paperclips could be money as
long as they were given a certain value. The government from any
country could decide that paperclips were worth one cent. The point is,
anything can be money as long as the government says it is.
More Piggy Pages
Philadelphia Mint
Travel along
with us as we visit the biggest mint in the United
States! |
Counterfeit Money
What is it and how do
you recognize it when
you have it? |
Coin Collecting
This page explains
what you need to start a collection. |
Back to
What is a
bank?
This page lists
different kinds of banks and the services they offer. |
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