Money in the twenty-first century : cheap, mobile, and digital
- Oakland : University of California, 2024
- xiii, 209 p. ; ill., 24 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Money is increasingly cheap, digital, and mobile. In Money in the Twenty-First Century, economist Richard Holden examines the virtues and risks of low interest rates, mobile money, and cryptocurrencies, and explains how these three elemental forces will continue to play out--in our wallets, on the blockchain, and throughout major economies--in the decades to come. Holden weaves in the stories of three people who have exerted massive influence over the future of modern money: US treasury secretary Janet Yellen, Ethereum cofounder Vitalik Buterin, and Raghuram Rajan, former governor of the Reserve Bank of India and chief economist at the International Monetary Fund. Moving from micro to macro, Holden investigates the infrastructure that permits digital transactions, the currencies that underpin them, the race for control of those currencies, shifts in policy and the international monetary system, and the impact on our politics of money in the digital age. Ultimately, Money in the Twenty-First Century asks if governments can keep these three tectonic powers of low interest rates, mobile money, and decentralized finance under control.
9780520395268 hbk.
Cashless society Digital banking Govcoins Crypto Exorbitant privilege Cheap money Asset bubbles Government finances Bank Cryptocurrencies Low interest rates Digital currency Mobile money Bitcoin Federal funds rate Fiat currency Network externalities Private digital currency Reserve currency Transactions Smart contracts Transactions