ABSTRACT

Modern Money and the Rise and Fall of Capitalist Finance examines the true nature of modern money and seeks ideas for an alternative economic system for a just society.

This book suggests that adopting the ideas and institutions of a trust allowed personae to be combined with creditor-debtor relations and, by doing so, led to the evolution of modern money. This also helps explain why modern banking arose in England rather than continental Europe, by conceptualizing modern money as a trust and investigating the inseparable relationship between personae and modern money, because it is more than creditor-debtor relations - it takes the form of a trust.

In explaining how the capitalist credit-money economy differs from previous economies, this book is a significant contribution to the literature on modern money, heterodox economics and the philosophy of economics and finance.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|12 pages

Money and Property

chapter 2|18 pages

Person and Property—Mistaken Ideas

chapter 4|20 pages

The Political Economy of Modern Money in Early Modern Times

Indebted Personae and the Rise of Modern Money

chapter 5|14 pages

Shadow Banking in Neoliberalism

chapter 6|23 pages

Person, Property, and Trusts

Revisited

chapter 8|20 pages

What is to be Done?

Cooperative Basic Capital and the Abolition of the Hybridity