10 Things Everyone Needs to Know About Money
By Linda Davies
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10 Things Everyone Needs to Know About Money - Linda Davies
First published in 2021 by Atebol Cyfyngedig, Adeiladau’r Fagwyr,Llanfihangel Genau’r Glyn, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion SY24 5AQ
www.atebol.com
@10thingsmoney
Text copyright © Linda Davies 2021 Illustrations copyright © Nick Bashall 2021
The right of Linda Davies to be identified as the author and Nick Bashall to be identified as the illustrator of this work has been asserted.
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Cover design by Tom Burns Creative Designed by Owain Hammonds
ISBN 978-1-80106-150-6
The author and publisher have made every effort to ensure that the external websites and information contained in this book are accurate and up to date at the time of going to press. The author and publisher are not responsible for the content, quality or ongoing accessibility of the websites.
The publisher acknowledges the financial support of the Books Council of Wales.
Important Note
The information contained or referred to within this book does not constitute any form of advice, representation or arrangement by Atebol Cyfyngedig or the author. As a reader you take full responsibility for making (or refraining from making) any specific investment or other financial decisions. Given that the impact of any information expressed in this book can vary widely depending on your particular circumstances, you should always carry out your own research into any financial products that are of interest to you, including taking appropriate professional advice.
Although the contents of this book are provided in good faith, we do not warrant the completeness, truth or accuracy of the information or other content in this book, or its usefulness for any particular purpose. By reading this book you acknowledge and agree that (i) your use of the information contained within this book is at your own risk and (ii) you bear full responsibility for your own financial research and decisions, and that the author shall not be liable for any action that you or others take, or fail to take, based on your use of, or reliance on, the information contained within or referred to in this book.
This book is dedicated to my late father,Professor Glyn Davies.
Linda Davies
This book is dedicated to my twin sister,Suzanne.
Nick Bashall
Contents
Introduction
Chapter One: What is money? The biggest confidence trick of all time
Chapter Two: Where does money come from? The strange magic of new money
Chapter Three: What is the future of money? Rebels and revolution
Chapter Four: How to multiply money – the eighth wonder of the world
Chapter Five: How to invest money – the stock market, property, liquid assets and reckless conservatism
Chapter Six: How to lose money – ‘Brown’s Bottom’, burning money and vampire notes
Chapter Seven: How to steal money – buying time, multiple shades of grey,naughty money and castration
Chapter Eight: Money and children – how to raise financially literate children and how to invest for them. Angels, demons and gender
Chapter Nine: Money, psychology and you – how to identify and monetise your psychology
Chapter Ten: Money, psychology and the market – booms, busts, animal spirits, greater fools and crises: how not to get trampled by the herd and how to bolster your financial resilience
Money miscellany
Postscript
Useful resources
Further reading
Acknowledgements
Notes
Introduction
Money is a language all of its own. It doesn’t sit quietly in our pockets or in our bank accounts. Money talks. Sometimes it whispers. Sometimes it roars. It informs how long you live, where and how. What kind of education you receive. What you can do in your free time. If you have free time. It influences continents, governments, political systems, economies, war, peace, terrorism, crime and the planet itself. We ignore it at our peril. Sometimes money doesn’t want to be heard or seen. Those who control it like encrypting it, either with code or with jargon.
In this book I strip away the jargon and give voice to ten things that will help us better understand and speak the language of money. This fluency will help us to conserve and grow our money, to invest wisely, to avoid the pitfalls that part us from our money, to use but not be enslaved by debt - in short, to master money so that it does not master us. In so doing, we will improve much more than just our financial health. We can learn to wield money for the greater good.
If money is power, so too is knowledge.
This is a very personal book for me. My late father, Glyn Davies, was Emeritus Professor of Economics at Cardiff University and his last and greatest book was entitled A History of Money. It contained a lifetime’s learning, wit and wisdom and won him many prizes and plaudits. It has inspired this book. His own interest in the subject was sparked when he was a boy growing up in the valleys of south Wales. Roaming the hills one day he discovered a hoard of silver Roman coins. And he wondered, who had owned them? And why had they been buried in a wooded valley? What was their story? Those coins had a hidden history and by touching them he was connected with it. (Incidentally, he gave the coins to one of his teachers in search of answers he sadly never found. Nor did he find out what happened to the coins…)
I was a canny little girl, growing up in the 1970s when UK inflation peaked at 25 per cent and interest rates at 17 per cent. I liked to save and I loved getting my interest statement from the bank showing how much my money was growing. While I sat there doing nothing! I found it incomprehensible and fascinating.
When I was five and one of my brothers twelve, we were taking the ferry home from a holiday in Ireland. Both my parents were confined to their cabin by food poisoning so they thrust some money at us and told us to go and buy some food for ourselves. Instead we found the slot machines. I fed them pennies and, lo and behold, I won the jackpot. But my brother was greedy. He managed to convince me that if I kept gambling I would win another jackpot. Despite my instinctive feeling that this was unlikely, I listened to him until I had gambled away almost every penny. We had just enough for one plate of chips, which we shared looking pathetic in the canteen. We went back to our parents and I told them there was a money machine which gave you money. Trouble was it ate all my money so could I please have some more…
An early lesson in the power of money, the perils of gambling and the risk of addiction.
Still fascinated by money, I studied it at university, reading Politics, Philosophy and Economics at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. I learned about the theory and then about the practice. For the next eight years I worked as an investment banker, a cog in the heart of the money machine in London, New York and Eastern Europe. And then I escaped to write novels about money. In many ways, money was the central character in those books.
I still work in the financial services sector as a Director of an FCA (Financial Conduct Authority) approved and regulated company and as a consultant and adviser to various financial companies.
In this book, I share with you my insider’s knowledge.
Chapter One
What is money?
The biggest confidence trick of all time
Our twenty-first century notes, coins and debit cards are a kind of ethereal, intangible, largely invisible¹ fiat money. In Latin, the word fiat means ‘let it be so’. They are only worth something because we believe they are worth something, because our governments have declaimed ‘let it be so’, legitimizing them by taking them in payment of taxes, and by decreeing that people must accept them for all debts. For good measure, our governments often further legitimise our fiat money by invoking the divine in the iconography on our notes and coins. ‘In God we trust’, declare US dollar bills.
Governments effectively wave the magic wand of belief to render otherwise worthless pieces of paper and metal valuable in what is akin to the biggest confidence trick of all time. Think of this as financial abracadabra.
Without the magic spell of belief, as we shall see below, fiat money is worthless.
If we travelled back in time, say to the eighteenth century, armed with one of our twenty-pound notes and a debit card and we attempted to buy a loaf of bread and a pail of milk, we’d likely be thrown in the stocks and pelted with potatoes. The note and the card would be useless because they would have no context: neither king, government nor citizens would recognise them. No one would believe in them and this lack of belief would render them worthless.
Let’s contrast this with the forerunner of fiat money: commodity money – money that has a use independent of the ability to spend it. Money that has not been ‘magicked’ into being.
If we conducted our time travel armed with a few gold coins, we would be received with glad cries and open arms because gold is a recognised, useful and coveted commodity. Everyone in eighteenth-century Britain would know all about gold, they would all believe that it could be used to buy goods and services as well as to make valuable jewellery. Other kinds of commodity money used by our ancestors globally were similarly multipurpose – whales’ teeth had ceremonial value; cowrie shells, like gold, were originally used as jewellery (and as the illustration on page 6 reveals, could serve a variety of purposes); saucepans speak for themselves, as do iron rakes and arrowheads.
But both fiat and commodity money share a central characteristic. If we don’t believe in them, if we can’t find a use for them, they become worthless.
We can see this with fiat money in Germany’s Weimar Republic (1918–33), an era of hyperinflation, where notes had more value as firewood than as currency and people literally burned them to heat their homes.
And we can see this with commodity money in nineteenth-century Fiji.
In the middle of the century, a trading ship was captured off one of the Fijian islands. On board was a treasure chest, brimful of gold coins. The finders of the treasure found a novel use for them. They played ducks and drakes, skipping the coins of gold across the glittering water. One of the young Fijians who had played with the plundered gold later became a government official after Fiji became a British Crown colony in 1874. Even then, he was still reluctant to accept payment in sterling silver or gold sovereigns. They just didn’t mean much to him.