What Has Government Done to Our Money? The Value of Exchange
What Has Government Done to Our Money?
Murray N. Rothbard
II.
Money in a Free Society
1. The Value of Exchange
How did money begin? Clearly, Robinson Crusoe had no need for
money. He could not have eaten gold coins. Neither would Crusoe
and Friday, perhaps exchanging fish for lumber, need to bother
about money. But when society expands beyond a few families, the
stage is already set for the emergence of money.
To explain the role of money, we must go even further back, and
ask: why do men exchange at all? Exchange is the prime basis of
our economic life. Without exchanges, there would be no real
economy and, practically, no society. Clearly, a voluntary
exchange occurs because both parties expect to benefit. An
exchange is an agreement between A and B to transfer the goods or
services of one man for the goods and services of the other.
Obviously, both benefit because each values what he receives in
exchange more than what he gives up. When Crusoe, say, exchanges
some fish for lumber, he values the lumber he "buys" more
than the fish he "sells," while Friday, on the contrary,
values the fish more than the lumber. From Aristotle to Marx, men
have mistakenly believed that an exchange records some sort of equality of value—that if one barrel of fish is exchanged for ten logs, there is some sort of underlying equality between them. Actually, the exchange was made only because each party valued the two products in different order.
Why should exchange be so universal among mankind? Fundamentally,
because of the great variety in nature: the variety in
man, and the diversity of location of natural resources. Every
man has a different set of skills and aptitudes, and every plot
of ground has its own unique features, its own distinctive
resources. From this external natural fact of variety come
exchanges; wheat in Kansas for iron in Minnesota; one man's
medical services for another's playing of the violin.
Specialization permits each man to develop his best skill, and
allows each region to develop its own particular resources. If no
one could exchange, if every man were forced to be completely
self-sufficient, it is obvious that most of us would starve to
death, and the rest would barely remain alive. Exchange is the
lifeblood, not only of our economy, but of civilization itself.