How Money Fails to Track Value

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/H25ruF4z92bisttYa/how-money-fails-to-track-value

Contents

Context: Theory of Money

Money is one of the largest factors in determining what gets done in the world and a clearer understanding of it and how it interacts with what we value may pay dividend$. It is commonly claimed that money is an estimate of value and some seem to even think that it is value. While clearly this isn’t entirely true, let’s examine it in more detail, and see what money really is and what it really tracks. What is money? At first glance it seems to be something you can convert into arbitrary goods and services by paying for things. In that sense it seems kind of similar to, say, having iron ore that you may convert into nails. It’s a bit more subtle though. Firstly it’s something you may convert into practically anything, a kind of universal resource. For another, it isn’t itself generally destroyed in the process and is instead simply exchanged: money moves towards the person giving the good or service and away from the person receiving the good or service. It is a kind of resource that can be created from nothing or destroyed and be of any number from positive to negative infinity. Finally, it is supported by a kind of universal belief and convention; if you fail to believe in it, then it ceases to exist, and the belief that exists is distributed amongst all the people involved in transactions. Given how it works I would say it is the natural generalization of an IOU or social status change and probably originated in that (History of money). From this then it’s reasonable to say that there are five significant operations on money:

What does money track?

Using this

Knowing how money fails to track value and refining our understanding of how it works could possibly help us in multiple ways:

Further information