Edouard.ai
Back to blogAltcoins

History of Money: From Gold to Worthless Paper

February 3, 2026
17 min read
569 views

History of Money: From Gold to Worthless Paper

100 years ago, your banknote could be exchanged for gold. Today, it's backed by... nothing. How did we get here?


Table of Contents

  1. Introduction: The Greatest Heist in History
  2. The Era of Barter and Its Limits
  3. Gold: The Universal Money
  4. The Invention of Paper Money
  5. The Classical Gold Standard (1870-1914)
  6. World War I: The Beginning of the End
  7. Bretton Woods (1944): The Dollar Becomes King
  8. Nixon Shock (1971): The Final Break
  9. The Fiat Era (1971-Today)
  10. The Post-2008 Monetary Explosion
  11. And Now?
  12. Timeline: Key Dates
  13. FAQ
  14. Conclusion: Understanding the Past to Prepare for the Future
  15. Sources and References

Meta Title: History of Money: From Gold to Worthless Paper - Complete Guide Meta Description: Discover the complete history of money from gold to fiat currency. Gold standard, Bretton Woods, Nixon Shock, and the rise of Bitcoin as alternative. Keywords: history of money, gold standard, fiat currency, Nixon Shock, Bretton Woods, monetary history, Bitcoin origin


Introduction: The Greatest Heist in History

In 1900, if you owned a $20 bill, you could walk into any bank and leave with an ounce of gold. It was a contractual promise printed on every bill: "Payable to the bearer in gold".

In 2025, that same ounce of gold is worth about $2,000. The $20 bill is still worth... $20.

What happened? How did we go from money backed by gold to numbers created by computers? This story is the greatest wealth transfer in human history – and almost no one knows it.


The Era of Barter and Its Limits

The Fundamental Problem

Before the invention of money, humans practiced barter: the direct exchange of goods for other goods. A farmer would trade his wheat for the blacksmith's tools.

This system suffered from a fatal problem: the double coincidence of wants.

Practical example:

  • You're a fisherman with fresh fish
  • You need shoes
  • The cobbler doesn't need fish (he already has some)
  • Your fish will spoil while you look for someone who wants fish AND has shoes

The more complex an economy becomes, the more insurmountable this problem becomes.

The First Forms of Money

Societies naturally converged on intermediate goods accepted by everyone:

Civilization Currency Used Period
Africa Shells (cowries) -1200 BC
Ancient Rome Salt (salarium → salary) -500 BC
North America Beads (wampum) 1500-1800
Pacific Islands Rai stones Until 20th century
Mongolia Compressed tea Until 20th century

These primitive currencies all had a major flaw: their supply was not sufficiently limited. You could always fish for more shells or extract more salt.


Gold: The Universal Money

Why Gold Triumphed

Among all elements of the periodic table, gold is the only one to combine all the properties of ideal money:

Physical properties:

  • Indestructible: doesn't rust, doesn't oxidize
  • Rare: all gold ever mined would fit in a cube 22 meters per side
  • Malleable: can be divided and shaped
  • Recognizable: unique color and density, difficult to counterfeit
  • Non-radioactive: unlike uranium
  • Stable: unlike noble gases

Monetary properties:

  • High stock-to-flow: existing stock is enormous compared to annual production (~2%)
  • Universally recognized: accepted by all civilizations for 5,000 years
  • Is no one's debt: intrinsic value, not a promise

"Gold is money. Everything else is credit."

— J.P. Morgan, before US Congress, 1912

5,000 Years of Stability

Gold served as money for the Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Islamic empires, medieval and modern Europe.

Remarkable fact: An ounce of gold bought a quality toga in ancient Rome. Today, an ounce of gold buys a quality suit. Gold's purchasing power has remained stable over 2,000 years.

No fiat currency has ever accomplished this feat.


The Invention of Paper Money

Goldsmiths and the First Bills

In the Middle Ages, people entrusted their gold to goldsmiths for safekeeping. In return, the goldsmith issued a receipt attesting to the deposit.

These receipts, more practical to carry than physical gold, began circulating as a means of payment. This was the birth of paper money.

The problem: Goldsmiths quickly realized that not everyone came for their gold at the same time. So they began issuing more receipts than they had gold in reserve.

This is the birth of fractional reserve – and the beginning of systemic fraud.

The Permanent Temptation

Every time a government or bank had the power to create money from nothing, it succumbed to temptation.

Historical examples:

Era Place Manipulation Result
3rd century Rome Silver reduction in coins Empire collapse
1720 France Law's System (uncovered bills) National bankruptcy
1789-1796 France Assignats (revolution) Hyperinflation
1921-1923 Germany War debt financing Bread at 200 billion marks

The lesson is always the same: the power to create money corrupts absolutely.


The Classical Gold Standard (1870-1914)

The Golden Age of Stability

The period 1870-1914 is often called the "Classical Gold Standard". It was an era of:

  • Monetary stability: prices were remarkably stable over decades
  • Economic growth: industrial revolution, major innovations
  • International trade: exchanges flourished thanks to fixed exchange rates
  • Fiscal discipline: governments couldn't spend more than they had

How it worked:

  • Each national currency was defined by a fixed weight in gold
  • 1 pound sterling = 7.32 grams of gold
  • 1 dollar = 1.50 grams of gold
  • Exchange rates were therefore fixed and predictable

Result on inflation:

Period Average Annual Inflation
1800-1900 (gold standard) ~0%
1900-1970 (mixed) ~2%
1971-2025 (pure fiat) ~4-5%
Good to know: During the classical gold standard, a worker could save throughout his life and find the same purchasing power at retirement. This is unthinkable today.

The Limits of the Gold Standard

The system wasn't perfect:

  • Rigidity: inability to quickly adjust the money supply in case of crisis
  • Deflationary: tendency toward falling prices (good for savers, difficult for debtors)
  • Dependence on discoveries: money supply depended on gold mines

But these "flaws" were precisely what protected citizens against government abuse.


World War I: The Beginning of the End

Financing War Without Gold

In August 1914, war broke out. Problem: war is expensive, very expensive. Far more than taxes can finance.

Governments' solution: Suspend gold convertibility "temporarily" to be able to print money without limit.

Each belligerent country did the same:

  • Germany
  • France
  • United Kingdom
  • Austria-Hungary

"We'll be home before the leaves fall."

— Kaiser Wilhelm II, August 1914

The war lasted 4 years. Gold convertibility never really returned.

German Hyperinflation (1921-1923)

Germany, defeated and heavily indebted (Versailles Treaty reparations), chose to print money to pay its debts.

Chronology of the catastrophe:

Date Price of Bread
January 1921 1 mark
January 1922 4 marks
January 1923 250 marks
July 1923 3,500 marks
September 1923 1,500,000 marks
November 1923 200,000,000,000 marks (200 billion)

Human consequences:

  • Lifetime savings wiped out in a few months
  • Retirees reduced to begging
  • Middle class ruined
  • Rise of political extremism (breeding ground for Nazism)
Historical lesson: Hyperinflation is not just an economic phenomenon. It's a civilization destroyer. It directly contributed to the rise of Nazism and World War II.

Bretton Woods (1944): The Dollar Becomes King

A New Global Monetary System

In July 1944, while the war wasn't yet over, 44 countries met at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to redefine the global monetary system.

The Bretton Woods agreements:

  1. The dollar becomes the only currency convertible into gold ($35 = 1 ounce of gold)
  2. All other currencies are pegged to the dollar at fixed rates
  3. The USA holds 70% of world gold reserves
  4. Creation of the IMF and World Bank

Advantage for the USA: The dollar becomes the world's reserve currency. The whole world must accumulate dollars to trade. This is the beginning of the American "exorbitant privilege".

The Unkept Promise

The system rested on a promise: the USA would maintain enough gold to cover dollars in circulation.

But the USA financed:

  • The Korean War (1950-1953)
  • The Vietnam War (1955-1975)
  • The space program
  • The "Great Society" social program

How? By printing dollars, without proportionally increasing their gold reserves.

European countries, notably De Gaulle's France, began to doubt and demand conversion of their dollars into gold.

"The United States exports its inflation to the rest of the world thanks to the privilege of the dollar."

— Charles de Gaulle, 1965


Nixon Shock (1971): The Final Break

August 15, 1971

Faced with the hemorrhage of their gold reserves, the USA had a choice:

  1. Reduce spending and return to balance
  2. Abandon gold convertibility

Richard Nixon chose option 2.

On August 15, 1971, in a televised address, Nixon announced the "temporary" suspension of dollar convertibility into gold.

"I have directed Secretary Connally to suspend temporarily the convertibility of the dollar into gold."

— Richard Nixon, August 15, 1971

This "temporary" suspension has lasted 54 years.

Immediate Consequences

On the dollar:

  • Massive devaluation against gold
  • Gold goes from $35 to $850 per ounce in 1980 (+2,300%)

On American debt:

Year US National Debt
1971 $400 billion
1980 $900 billion
1990 $3,200 billion
2000 $5,600 billion
2010 $13,500 billion
2020 $27,000 billion
2025 $36,000 billion

Direct correlation: As soon as the gold constraint disappears, debt explodes.

WTF Happened in 1971?

The website wtfhappenedin1971.com documents dozens of charts showing a sharp break in 1971:

  • Wages decoupling from productivity
  • Explosion of wealth inequality
  • Soaring real estate prices
  • Explosion of debt (public and private)
  • Stagnation of real purchasing power

All these phenomena begin or accelerate in 1971. This is not a coincidence.


The Fiat Era (1971-Today)

No More Limits

Since 1971, we live in a system of pure fiat currencies. "Fiat" comes from Latin "let it be done" – money exists because the government decrees it.

Characteristics of the fiat system:

  • No limit to money creation
  • Permanent inflation as official policy
  • Central banks arbitrarily decide the value of money
  • Debt becomes the engine of the economy

Inflation: Official Policy

All major central banks have a positive inflation target:

  • ECB: 2%
  • Fed: 2%
  • Bank of Japan: 2%
  • Bank of England: 2%

Translation: Your money will officially lose 2% of value each year. Over 35 years, that's a guaranteed 50% loss.

What was once considered a scourge (inflation) has become a political goal.

Repeated Crises

The fiat system has not brought promised stability:

Crisis Year Main Cause
Stagflation 1970s Money printing + oil shock
1987 Crash 1987 Speculative bubble, program trading
Asian Crisis 1997 Foreign currency debt
Dot-com Bubble 2000 Easy money, speculation
Subprime 2008 Irresponsible mortgage lending
COVID 2020 Massive printing ($6 trillion)

Each crisis is "solved" by even more money creation, which prepares the next crisis.


The Post-2008 Monetary Explosion

Quantitative Easing: The Digital Money Printer

After the 2008 crisis, central banks invented "Quantitative Easing" (QE) – a technical term for "massive money creation."

Central bank balance sheets:

Central Bank 2008 Balance 2025 Balance Multiplication
Fed (USA) $900B $7,500B x8.3
ECB (Europe) €1,500B €6,800B x4.5
BoJ (Japan) ¥100,000B ¥750,000B x7.5

COVID: The Final Acceleration

In 2020, facing the pandemic, the floodgates were opened like never before:

  • The Fed created $4 trillion in a few months
  • The ECB created €2.5 trillion
  • Checks distributed directly to citizens (USA)

Result: 2022-2023 inflation at its highest in 40 years (8-10%).


And Now?

Signs of End of Cycle

Several indicators suggest the current system is reaching its limits:

1. Unsustainable debts

  • USA: debt at 120% of GDP
  • Japan: debt at 260% of GDP
  • France: debt at 110% of GDP

2. Trapped interest rates

  • Raising rates → cascade of bankruptcies
  • Keeping them low → persistent inflation

3. Loss of confidence

  • De-dollarization (BRICS)
  • Massive gold purchases by central banks
  • Rise of cryptocurrencies

4. Growing instability

  • Increasingly frequent crises
  • Increasingly massive interventions

Bitcoin: Return to Sound Money?

In 2009, in the midst of the financial crisis, an unknown person under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto created Bitcoin.

The message inscribed in the first block:

"The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks"

Bitcoin was explicitly created as a response to the failing monetary system:

  • Fixed supply of 21 million units (no inflation possible)
  • Decentralized (no government controls it)
  • Transparent (everyone can verify)
  • Unconfiscatable (in self-custody)

It's the first monetary system to offer gold's properties (scarcity, durability) with digital advantages (portability, divisibility).


Timeline: Key Dates

Date Event Impact
-3000 BC First gold coins (Lydia) Birth of metallic money
12th century Goldsmith bills Birth of paper money
1694 Bank of England creation First modern central bank
1870-1914 Classical gold standard Maximum monetary stability
1913 Federal Reserve creation Private US central bank
1914 WWI begins Gold convertibility suspended
1921-1923 German hyperinflation 200 billion marks for bread
1944 Bretton Woods Agreements Dollar = only gold-convertible currency
1971 Nixon Shock End of dollar/gold convertibility
1999 Euro creation European fiat currency
2008 Subprime crisis Start of massive QE
2009 Bitcoin creation Alternative to fiat system
2020 COVID crisis Record money printing

FAQ

Why did governments abandon gold?

Because gold imposed fiscal discipline. With gold, impossible to finance costly wars, ambitious social programs, or bank bailouts through money creation. Abandoning gold freed governments from all constraint.

Can we return to the gold standard?

Technically yes, politically very unlikely. No indebted government would want to impose this discipline on itself. However, some countries (Russia, China) are massively accumulating gold, suggesting a possible future evolution of the system.

Is gold still relevant today?

Yes, gold remains an excellent store of value. Central banks around the world continue to accumulate it (record purchases in 2022-2023). Gold protects against inflation and crises. Its limits: portability and divisibility.

Can Bitcoin replace gold?

Bitcoin shares gold's monetary properties (scarcity, durability) with additional advantages (perfect portability, infinite divisibility, verifiability). Some see Bitcoin as "digital gold" of the 21st century. Both can coexist as complementary stores of value.

Can the current system last indefinitely?

No fiat system has lasted forever in history. The average lifespan is 27 years. The euro is 25 years old, the post-1971 system is 54 years old. The question is not IF the system will change, but WHEN and HOW.


Conclusion: Understanding the Past to Prepare for the Future

Monetary history teaches us a fundamental lesson: every time governments had the power to create money without constraint, they abused it.

From Rome diluting its coins to the Fed printing trillions, the pattern repeats. And every time, it's savers and ordinary citizens who pay the price.

Key lessons:

  1. The gold standard worked for centuries, guaranteeing stability and prosperity

  2. Every abandonment of gold was justified by "temporary emergencies" that became permanent

  3. The current system is historically abnormal: humanity never lived with purely fiat currencies on a global scale

  4. Alternatives are emerging: gold remains relevant, Bitcoin offers a new option

We are living at the end of a monetary cycle. The rest of this story is being written now, and you have the power to choose in which currency you store your wealth.


Related Articles - Monetary Sovereignty

Sources and References

  1. Federal Reserve: Historical money supply data
  2. World Gold Council: Gold statistics
  3. wtfhappenedin1971.com: Historical charts
  4. G. Edward Griffin: "The Creature from Jekyll Island" (1994)
  5. Saifedean Ammous: "The Bitcoin Standard" (2018)
  6. Murray Rothbard: "What Has Government Done to Our Money?" (1963)
  7. National Bureau of Economic Research: Historical inflation data
  8. Bundesbank: German hyperinflation archives

⚠️ Disclaimer: This document is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice.


Article written in December 2025 | Category: Money, Debt & Financial Sovereignty

Share:

Want to know more?

Discover all our articles and guides to master crypto.

View all articles