Debt

the first 5,000 years

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David Graeber: Debt (2014)

542 pages

English language

Published Nov. 6, 2014

ISBN:
978-1-61219-419-6
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OCLC Number:
894149432

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5 stars (8 reviews)

"Before there was money, there was debt. Every economics textbook says the same thing: Money was invented to replace onerous and complicated barter systems--to relieve ancient people from having to haul their goods to market. The problem with this version of history? There's not a shred of evidence to support it. Here anthropologist David Graeber presents a stunning reversal of conventional wisdom. He shows that for more than 5,000 years, since the beginnings of the first agrarian empires, humans have used elaborate credit systems to buy and sell goods - that is, long before the invention of coins or cash. It is in this era, Graeber argues, that we also first encounter a society divided into debtors and creditors. Graeber shows that arguments about debt and debt forgiveness have been at the center of political debates from Italy to China, as well as sparking innumerable insurrections. He also brilliantly demonstrates …

23 editions

How we got here and why we're stuck

5 stars

I read Debt right after The Dawn of Everything (also by Graeber), and my opinion of these two books is closely interlinked. The combination is an extensive unwinding of the sort of economic and social history I learned in school. I've had to re-imagine the ways that humanity developed our relationship with agriculture, with technology, and with the interplay of social obligations which we now categorize as money and economics.

The core insight and question isn't any of those individual revelations. What Graeber is trying to get you to think about is the stickiness of contemporary social relationships & structures, and the ways that we have lost the ability to imagine the possibility of change. No economic or political system has ever been as committed as ours is to narrowing the realms of the possible and foreclosing the ability to imagine other ways of organizing society. Historically, social dynamics have …

Debt: The First 5000 Years

5 stars

Fascinating read. Graeber takes you through virtually the whole of human recorded history, from Babylonia to the 2008 financial crisis. Throughout it all, Graeber dissects the strange and complicated relations between people, money and morality.

In Debt: The First 5000 years, the author enjoys dissecting and ultimately rejecting many commonplace attitudes regarding the markets and the morality of debt. On occasion, Graeber’s ideas are too wild for me, but on the whole they are sober, well thought out conclusions regarding topics most other are not really thinking about at all.

Biggest takeaway? It’s fun to see a Cultural Anthropologist show Economists that they really have no idea how their own field works. Adam Smith might as well have been a Fairy Tale author.

Review of 'Debt' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

A thoughtful dive into the history of currency, what we all owe each other, and the philosophies of equality and merit we take for granted underpinning everything. Ultimately, Graeber critiques capitalism without suggesting any quick fixes.

He ascribes a considerable amount of intentionality and architecting to our current system, and his historical storytelling sometimes invisibly transitions into factually unsubstantiated musing, but his ideas are gristle for thought, and good leads into more reading on the philosophy of value.

Review of 'Debt: The First 5,000 Years' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The author enjoys upending the assumptions most people have about money without feeling like he has to stick to the assumptions that economists have built into their mathematics. One of these is the idea that during historical episodes where there was no or little cash, there was no money, pointing to the evidence for thriving credit activity millennia in the past without benefit of a system of coinage. I really liked the descriptions of non-Western cultures and what they used money for, which would lead very directly to a discussion of slavery and of the value of human life. In the last section of the book, he focuses on the modern era and the idea of the post-gold standard fiat currency based on the idea of debts which can never be retired ever. It was only when I got to the afterword that I found out that he had some …

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Subjects

  • Money
  • Debt
  • Financial crises
  • History

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