7.15.2009

The Vast Aruban Coin Shadow Economy or Money Isn't Real, George. It Doesn't Matter. It Only Seems Like it Does.

I have a job that requires me to handle cash frequently. Yesterday, in exchange for a product that my employer sells, I received a shiny circular piece of metal with various words and pictures etched onto its surface. I held the piece of metal in my hand, inspected it, and then thanked my customer, who left with purchases in hand. I then placed the piece of metal into a cash register and went on with what I was doing before the customer entered.

A monetary transaction had been completed. Trillions of transactions just like the one above take place every day in our country. These transactions form the basis of our economy and by extension, our society. The only catch: the piece of metal was not manufactured in the United States. It was in fact manufactured in Aruba. According to whomever decides these things, this piece of metal manufactured in Aruba is worth exactly 25% of an Aruban florin, which is the basis of Aruba's economy and by extension, the Aruban society. In case you were wondering, an Aruban florin is worth .56 American dollars. You'll have to excuse me because I'm really not sure who or what decides that either. I found out how many US dollars one Aruban florin is worth by typing the phrase "aruban dollar exchange rate" into an Internet search engine. The Internet is an amalgamation of interconnected computers. Anyone who has access to a computer is free to publish anything at any time to the Internet. You are in fact currently reading one such publication.

 
Somebody, somewhere decided these were worth something.


If you read the first paragraph of this Internet publication closely, you will notice that I inspected this piece of metal before accepting it as payment for my employer's wares. That was an important detail; forgive me for glossing over it so quickly. I should've said that I inspected it closely. So close in fact that I recognized it as not an American quarter (which it ostensibly was since it was being used in a monetary transaction taking place in America), but an Aruban 25 cent piece. I was able to recognize it as such because it had the word "ARUBA" emblazoned in relatively large capital letters across one of its faces and the number "25" etched in even larger characters on the reverse face. I knew that I was not receiving an American quarter as payment.

Additionally, I made the reasonable assumption that this piece of metal I was receiving was not worth as much as an American quarter. I knew both of these things and yet still accepted it as payment. I didn't care that it was not an American quarter. I didn't care that it was not worth 25 American cents. I didn't care about these things not because I am a lazy, absent-minded employee, but because I knew I would be able to give this piece of metal to another customer later on in the day and he would accept it just like I did. I knew this because I have done it many times before and will continue to do it in the future. I guess you could say that I had a high level of confidence that this Aruban 25 cent piece would be accepted in my society as being worth 25 American cents. Of course this is how all money works all of the time, everywhere. Pieces of paper and metal are assigned theoretical values by mysterious forces, but can only be given literal value by regular people like you and me because we are confident that other people will accept their theoretical value.

Yesterday, my customer and I imbued a piece of Arbuan metal with 7 cents of literal value that it never theoretically possessed. What power we have! I postulate that thousands of such transactions take place in our country every day. Maybe hundreds of thousands. Maybe millions. After all, even if you don't actively choose to accept foreign coins as domestic currency like I did yesterday, you may accidentally accept them.

There are at least 51 versions of the American quarter in circulation today, therefore if I'm holding a quarter in my hand, you have only a 1.96% chance of telling me what it looks like.* You can certainly be forgiven for glancing at one side of a circular piece of metal found in America and assuming it's an American quarter. It's an easy mistake to make. I wonder at the value of this shadow economy of foreign coins in worldwide circulation. My customer and I created 7 cents of value out of thin air yesterday. In the trillions of monetary transactions that happen around the world every day, I wonder how many involve artificially inflated foreign currency. Average people like you and me could be creating millions of dollars of literal value every day! Of course, none of this matters at all. As long as you and I can agree on the value of any given piece of metal, then that's what it's literally worth. But it does make you think. Maybe money isn't real. Maybe George Jung's dad was right all along.




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*Yes, I know that this probably isn't correct given the fact that there are more regular quarters than any one state quarter. Cut me some slack. God, people who read footnotes can be so particular sometimes!
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2 comments:

Carl said...

If you bring in thousands of aruban quarters and give them out as change instead of quarters you could amass a small fortune.

I guess this is the same as stealing.

Why aren't there Real World Blogs. This season is worth reviewing.

Ashley said...

I have a 2009 Aruba coin also its size is a little bigger than a usa penny. On the back it says

25 /
/ c


The perimeter is shaped like a circle. I am wondering what this is worth if anyone has any info. Please comment back. Thx