Currency as Substitute

Currency, or money (for the purposes of this discussion, we will use the words interchangeably), can be defined as a purchasing power unit. It is a form of trade, a substitution for goods or services. It doesn't have to be the coins or bills you're most likely to be familiar with. In fact, everything from large stone wheels, knives, salt plates, and even human beings have been used as money over the ages. Currency is something that people believe reflects money.

For eg, if you have one barrel of wheat, and you want a cow, you have to find someone who not only has a cow, but who also wants a barrel of wheat, without currency, and who agrees to exchange. Visit now for fake money, buy fake money.

Let's say the bill suits your neighbor—got he's a cow and he wants a barrel of wheat. What if a whole cow is not worth a barrel of wheat? By giving you part of a cow, your neighbour can't really make adjustments.

Now, if you live in a place where round, stamped coins are widely considered to have a certain value and can be exchanged for other things, then you just have to find someone who needs wheat. That person will take the wheat in exchange for an agreed-upon amount of coins, which you can later use to buy a cow from someone else.