Hidden Forces

What History's Greatest Currencies Tell Us About the Future of the Dollar | Barry Eichengreen

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Mar 16, 2026
Barry Eichengreen, renowned economic historian of global currencies, offers a sweep through monetary history and the forces shaping the dollar. He traces coinage, Florence, the Dutch financial revolution, and the Spanish silver dollar. He then examines Britain’s rise, the dollar’s internationalization, and modern threats like political erosion and alternatives such as stablecoins and the euro.
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INSIGHT

Political Institutions Underpin Currency Credibility

  • International currency status depends on political as well as economic preconditions.
  • Barry Eichengreen cites Rome: independent Senate limited leaders' temptation to debase currency, linking rule of law to monetary credibility.
INSIGHT

Standardized Money Solved Trust For Distant Trade

  • The critical shift for money was from personal to impersonal transactions requiring a standardized unit of account.
  • Standardized coinage reduced trust frictions, enabling commerce between strangers across regions.
ANECDOTE

How Lydia's Stamped Coins Created Trust

  • Lydia likely invented coinage around 650 BC and Croesus standardized bimetallic stamping.
  • Electrum varied in gold/silver mix, so stamping fixed value and the king's guarantee widened acceptance.
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