Versuchen GOLD - Frei

The future of money

Hindustan Times Thane

|

July 27, 2025

How did we get to the point where so much of the world’s money is, in a sense, fictional; a quiet social contract in which we simply agree that certain numbers represent a certain value? What's next for this pivotal invention that now underpins our world? Its nature, even its role, are changing. From pouch to pocket to pixel, as money becomes software, the core issue is no longer how it looks or even how it moves. It’s who decides where it goes, when it stops, and why

- Kashyap Kompella

What is money? Economists begin with function.

Money, they say, does three things: it lets us exchange goods and services, acts as a standard measure of value, and it lets us store value.

A kind of economic Swiss Army knife that is remarkably adaptable and endlessly circulated.

John Maynard Keynes saw money as a bridge between present and future. Milton Friedman warned that it could be a weapon in the wrong hands; that too much of it, too fast, would corrode a system.

Hyman Minsky went deeper still: all money is a promise, he said, but not all promises are equal. Some come wrapped in the authority of the state, others in the credibility of a bank, still others in the brute fact of power.

Today, a hundred-rupee note doesn’t in fact represent a hundred rupees. It asks to be believed as such.

What we call currency is a fiction wrapped in design: Microtext and hologram, watermark and thread, security and ceremony. We dress our illusions well.

Where coins offered a kind of weight and direct value, and the early notes were backed by metal (often gold), stored somewhere, safe and tangible, most currency is now backed by the heft of its respective state. By inertia as well, in a sense.

But really, in a world where money is mostly numbers drifting across invisible networks, what holds it up is our collective agreement. Consensus as collateral. Money is the most powerful fiction humans ever agreed to believe.

(See the story alongside for more on how this works, and how we got here.)

The death of cash

Is it accident that most money now doesn’t even exist as paper?

What does it mean that so much of the ritual and choreography around this asset is fading?

There was a time when one went to the bank to update a passbook, and to an ATM to withdraw the notes. Money still had a place, a shape, a texture.

More and more, today, it doesn't.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Hindustan Times Thane

Hindustan Times Thane

With defeats stacking up, India’s ODI blueprint shows some flaws

India have lost four of the last eight ODIs, playing nothing like the team that delivered strong back-to-back showings in ICC events.

time to read

3 mins

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

With defeats stacking up, India’s ODI blueprint shows some flaws

India have lost four of the last eight ODIs, playing nothing like the team that delivered strong back-to-back showings in ICC events.

time to read

3 mins

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

India-EU trade talks at ‘historic juncture’

{ LEADERS CONFIRMED AS R-DAY GUESTS

time to read

4 mins

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

Hindustan Times Thane

Top court reserves verdict on nod for passive euthanasia

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday reserved its judgment ona piea seeking permission for passive euthanasia of a 31-year-old man who has remained in a permanent vegetative state for more than a decade, even as the court openly grappled with the moral limits of judicial decision-making in matters of life and death.

time to read

1 mins

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

Hindustan Times Thane

Iran vows to defend itself; Arab states help avert Trump action

Iran will defend itself \"against any foreign threat\", the country’s foreign minister told his Saudi counterpart on Thursday, after US President Donald Trump said he would \"watch it and see\" about military action over the crackdown on protesters, AFP reported.

time to read

1 mins

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

To win it all, Djokovic must show he has the legs to last

Sinner and Alcaraz potentially await Djokovic in the latter stages of the Australian Open

time to read

3 mins

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

Pak, Saudi and Turkey working on defence deal

Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey have prepared a draft defence agreement after nearly a year of talks, Pakistan's Minister for Defence Production said, a signal they could be seeking a bulwark against flareup of regional violence in the last two years.

time to read

1 min

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

IPO float cut lifts Jio, NSE listing outlook

The government has approved a cut to the minimum proportion of shares large companies looking to list must sell to 2.5% of their share capital from 5%, the capital markets regulator said on Thursday, paving the way for Reliance Jio Platforms’ highly-anticipated TPO.

time to read

1 min

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

Flights to US, Europe hit over turbulence in Iran

International flight operations connecting India with West Asia, Europe and the US were disrupted early on Thursday after Tran temporarily shut its airspace amid concernsabout possible military action between the US and Tran, forcing airlines to reroute, divert and cancel several long-haul services.

time to read

2 mins

January 16, 2026

Hindustan Times Thane

Choksi’s son also ‘actively’ involved in money laundering case with father: ED

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has, for the first time, claimed that fugitive diamantaire Mehul Choksi’s son, Rohan Choksi, was also “actively” involved in the offence of money laundering along with his father, whois accused of cheating Indian banks of thousands of crores of rupeesand now facing extradition proceedings in Belgium.

time to read

2 mins

January 16, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size