The Accidental Invention That Changed Everything
Paper money was not invented by governments or central banks. It was invented by merchants who were tired of carrying heavy coins. The story of how a simple receipt became the foundation of the modern financial system is one of the most consequential accidents in human history.
China — Where It All Began
The first paper money appeared in China during the Tang Dynasty around 618-907 AD. Merchants who needed to transfer large sums across long distances began depositing coins with trusted agents and receiving paper receipts instead. These receipts — called "flying money" — could then be exchanged for coins at the destination. The coins stayed put. The paper travelled.
By the Song Dynasty in the 10th century, the Chinese government had recognised what merchants already knew: paper was easier than metal. The first government-issued paper currency — called jiaozi — appeared around 960 AD. China had invented banknotes five centuries before Europe would even consider the idea.
Key Facts
First paper money: China, Tang Dynasty, c.618-907 AD
First government banknotes: China, Song Dynasty, c.960 AD
First European banknotes: Sweden, 1661
Bank of England notes: 1694
Marco Polo and the Astonished Europeans
When Marco Polo visited China in the 13th century, he was astounded by what he found. The Mongol Emperor Kublai Khan had taken paper money to its logical extreme — he had made it compulsory. Anyone caught refusing to accept paper money in trade could be executed. Marco Polo wrote detailed accounts of the system, describing how the Khan could create unlimited wealth simply by printing more paper.
European readers thought he was lying. The idea that a piece of paper could function as money seemed absurd. Gold and silver had intrinsic value. Paper had none. What Marco Polo was describing made no sense to the medieval European mind.
Europe Catches Up — Eventually
It took Europe another three centuries to catch up. The first European banknotes were issued in Sweden in 1661 by Stockholms Banco. The bank had issued more receipts than it had copper in reserve — essentially creating money from nothing. When depositors demanded their copper back, the bank collapsed. Sweden's experiment with paper money ended in the world's first bank run.
The lesson was not that paper money was impossible. It was that paper money required trust — and trust required discipline. The issuer had to maintain reserves, honour commitments and resist the temptation to simply print more paper whenever money was needed.
The Bank of England and the Modern System
The Bank of England, founded in 1694, got it closer to right. Its notes were backed by gold — a promise that the paper could always be exchanged for a fixed amount of the precious metal. This gold standard gave paper money the credibility it needed to function as a true medium of exchange.
The system worked for two centuries. Then, under the pressure of World War One's enormous costs, governments began printing money they could not back with gold. The link between paper and gold was stretched, then broken, then abandoned entirely. In 1971, the United States formally ended the convertibility of dollars to gold. Every major currency in the world became, officially, backed by nothing but trust in government.
"Money is a matter of functions four: a medium, a measure, a standard, a store." — William Stanley Jevons, 1875
What Money Actually Is
The story of paper money reveals something profound about the nature of money itself. Money has never really been about gold or silver or copper. It has always been about trust. The coins worked because people trusted they contained real metal. The paper worked because people trusted it could be exchanged for real metal. The modern banknote works because people trust that governments and central banks will maintain its value.
When that trust breaks down — as it did in Weimar Germany in 1923, Zimbabwe in 2008, or Venezuela in the 2010s — paper money becomes worthless almost overnight. The hyperinflation that follows destroys savings, collapses economies and destabilises governments. The paper itself never changes. Only the trust changes.
Flying Money
Chinese merchants create paper receipts to avoid carrying heavy coins.
First Banknotes
Chinese Song Dynasty issues first government paper currency.
Marco Polo
Marco Polo witnesses Kublai Khan's paper money system and reports back to a disbelieving Europe.
Europe's First Notes
Stockholms Banco issues Europe's first banknotes. Bank collapses in the world's first bank run.
Bank of England
Bank of England founded. Gold-backed notes establish credibility for paper money.
End of Gold Standard
US ends gold convertibility. All major currencies become fiat — backed by trust alone.
Sources & Further Reading
- Davies, Glyn. A History of Money: From Ancient Times to the Present Day. University of Wales Press, 2002.
- Encyclopaedia Britannica. "History of Money." britannica.com
- Smithsonian Magazine. "The History of Paper Money."
- Ferguson, Niall. The Ascent of Money. Penguin, 2008.
A Note From The Editor
Paper money is perhaps the most audacious collective fiction in human history — a shared agreement to treat pieces of paper as if they have intrinsic value, sustained entirely by mutual trust. What fascinates me is how fragile that trust actually is. When it breaks — Weimar Germany, Zimbabwe, Venezuela — the collapse is almost instantaneous. Centuries of accumulated financial infrastructure can unravel in months. We live inside this fiction so completely that we forget it is one. That forgetting is probably necessary. It's also probably dangerous.