Monkeys aren't people, and the exchanges in the monkey "economy" are at
best at analogy for a human economy. As with all analogies, there are
positive parallels as well as disanalogies. The issue originally raised
was whether the monkeys engaged in barter or monetary exchange. That, of
course, depends on what the essential characteristics of barter or monetary
exchange are taken to be. It won't do, however, to define the terms in
such a way that historical periods in which exchange was largely conducted
in gold and silver coin or fully backed paper are categorized as
barter. For that purpose, it is the lack of exchangeability by right
(ultimately through some shorter or longer chain) into something with
intrinsic value that is the most salient feature of money. I take the
monkey's tokens to fit that characteristic.
I agree with Matt Forstater that human monetary systems typically involve
infinite regress valuation. This may be a disanalogy with the monkey
economy, but it does not seem to me to address the salient feature in his
original argument. Also, the fact that I value money because I believe
that you value money, does not imply that the money that I hold is your
liability. Chains of valuation of financial assets must be anchored in
real goods -- sometimes they end in pork bellies; sometimes they end in
dollars. In our society, dollars are real goods -- despite the fiction
that they are liabilities of the Federal Reserve -- because they ultimately
supply a real service: as Matt notes, they get the IRS off your back. But
notice that this is not because they are a liability that must be accepted
by the issuer -- the IRS is not the issuer. Anchoring the value of dollars
in the payment of taxes is a sufficient but not necessary condition of its
value.
For example, when the Australians wanted to monetize exchange among
tribesmen in New Guinea, they proceeded in two steps. First, they
conditioned the tribesmen to valuing externally produced goods, such as
metal pots and knives, by giving them away. Then they offered those same
goods only in exchange for paper currency. The natives had to obtain the
paper currency by working in order to purchase the goods. No taxes are
involved. Nor do the exchanges at Australian stores involve a right
implied by the "liability" nature of the currency: after all, the prices
of the goods could change; certain goods may or may not be offered. All
that is needed is that the natives have a belief that the currency would
frequently enough serve as a means to obtaining the goods. As I have
described it, the situation in New Guinea is rather closely analogous to
that of the monkeys. Yet, it may seem to fall short of a full bodied
monetary economy if the exchanges were always short circuits from
Australian employers to native workers and back to Australian shops. But
if the natives begin to use the currency in longer circuits amongst
themselves, then a full bodied monetary economy would be in place. The
monkeys apparently were not given the opportunity to develop such exchanges
amongst themselves. But like all laboratory experiments, the point was to
examine some feature of reality by isolating it from others. So, while
there are positive analogies, there are also intentional disanalogies.
Kevin Hoover
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