Debt: The First 5,000 Years

The First 5,000 Years

paperback, 544 pages

English language

Published Nov. 27, 2012 by Melville House.

ISBN:
978-1-61219-129-4
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(133 reviews)

Every economics textbook says the same thing: Money was invented to replace onerous and complicated barter systems—to relieve ancient people from having to haul their goods to market. The problem with this version of history? There’s not a shred of evidence to support it.

Here anthropologist David Graeber presents a stunning reversal of conventional wisdom. He shows that for more than 5,000 years, since the beginnings of the first agrarian empires, humans have used elaborate credit systems to buy and sell goods—that is, long before the invention of coins or cash. It is in this era, Graeber argues, that we also first encounter a society divided into debtors and creditors.

Graeber shows that arguments about debt and debt forgiveness have been at the center of political debates from Italy to China, as well as sparking innumerable insurrections. He also brilliantly demonstrates that the language of the ancient works of law …

23 editions

An Essential Book with Some Holes

This is an extremely well argued, thought-provoking book, philosophically deconstructing the notion of debt to its core and then following its historical trajectory to the present day. As a corollary, Graeber shows how true “barter economies” have basically never existed, but the notion of money and debt has significantly evolved from its original development. The book goes a bit off the rails and is wildly inaccurate at the end once it gets into post-industrial economies, and the fact that Graeber doesn’t show his work and makes huge assumptions leaves lots to poke holes in. However, overall this is still an impressive and important book. Highly recommend

Review of 'Debt' on 'Goodreads'

How much do I love this book? Well it's the only book I have a pair of earrings made to look like.

Unravels everything I thought I knew about money, economic systems and debt. As dull as those topics sound, these unravelings expose a lot of assumptions about human nature. This is a book about human nature as much as it is about debt. History is far weirder and more compassionate than we've been led to believe.

I could read this over and over until I have it memorized.

Monumentalna rozprawa zwalczająca powszechny mit barteru i początków pieniądza

... oczywiście mimochodem przypominająca anarchistyczną (w radykalnym tego słowa znaczeniu) przeszłość ludzkich społeczności.

Czytałem przez jakieś dwa lata i miałem miejscami poczucie że czytam wciąż to samo na nowo. Niemniej mnogość przypisów, przykładów (czy bardziej anegdot) robi wrażenie. Na ile książki Graebera są faktycznie zgodne z rzeczywistością — pozostawiam środowisku do rozstrzygnięcia. Narracja Graebera oczywiście zyskuje na jego lekkim, łatwo przyswajalnym piórze.

Jest tu wiele o walutach, spłacaniu, kasacji i etyce długu, barterze, religii, rodzicielstwie i państwie. W imponujący sposób autor opisuje tu historie finansowe z Chin, Indii, Mezopotamii, Rzymu, Egiptu, na przestrzeni stuleci. W pamięci zapadł mi przeciekawy opis buddyjskiego rozwoju korporacjonizmu i samonapędzającego się wzbogacania klasztorów opartego na religii wzrostu, niczym wspolczesne MLM-y, ukróconych potem przez konfucjańskie chińskie rządy.

„Jeśli historia czegokolwiek uczy, to tego, że nie ma lepszego uzasadnienia sposobów opartych na przemocy, nadania im pozorów moralności, niż przedstawienie ich w kategoriach długu — przede wszystkim dlatego, …

How we got here and why we're stuck

I read Debt right after The Dawn of Everything (also by Graeber), and my opinion of these two books is closely interlinked. The combination is an extensive unwinding of the sort of economic and social history I learned in school. I've had to re-imagine the ways that humanity developed our relationship with agriculture, with technology, and with the interplay of social obligations which we now categorize as money and economics.

The core insight and question isn't any of those individual revelations. What Graeber is trying to get you to think about is the stickiness of contemporary social relationships & structures, and the ways that we have lost the ability to imagine the possibility of change. No economic or political system has ever been as committed as ours is to narrowing the realms of the possible and foreclosing the ability to imagine other ways of organizing society. Historically, social dynamics have …

reviewed Debito by David Graeber (La cultura -- 0770)

Review of 'Debito' on 'Goodreads'

The book is clearly not a light reading, the text is dense with notes, quotes and references. I liked the way it is organised and the clear prose of Graeber.
I think this is probably one book that should be read by anybody who is interested in politics and economics, because it helps grounding modern concepts into the roots those concepts have: money, debt but also community, sharing, slavery and so on.



Review of 'Debt' on 'Goodreads'

Definitely worth the read. Gets a bit too chatty at times, could use a slightly tighter structure, but the contents is great, and there is a lot of food for thought. The language is accessible and I probably didn't understand every point he made but just the many examples he gives themselves draw a picture of what "money" and economics is, what its roots are, how it shapes not only our economy but also our culture and social relations, and the most important parts: There's nothing God-given about this and things can be different.

Violence ends in Debt

David Graeber is a master of taking a familiar idea, then leaving it precisely where it is, and moving you as a reader around it to see it from unexpected angles. In Debt he does this masterfully. Beginning with a critique of the moralistic perspective of debt ("one should pay one's debts"), followed with a sharp denial of a common claim by most modern economists (that barter preceded money), Graeber lays into five thousand years of economic history via meticulous research and his own brand of coy, enjoyable writing.

From an anthropological analysis of contemporary societies to a historical analysis that thankfully takes in European and non-European views, the book is appreciably ambitious. It seamlessly links debt and contemporary economics to war, plunder and violence, something that has been long discussed but rarely so eloquently. It is also not without its flaws or a few broad claims, but Graeber's way …

Review of 'Debt' on 'GoodReads'

Debt is an anthropologist's take on the history of money, debt, and political economy. The book is largely an attack on many of the assumptions mainstream economists make about human nature and human history. Foremost among those false assumptions is what Graeber calls the Myth of Barter - the idea that prior to money, trade happened only through barter. Graeber, like others before him, points out that a society or economy organized around barter has never existed. Instead, the earliest human societies organized trade around centralized communal distribution or (much more commonly) credits and debts, often elaborately measured and recorded.

Graeber then re-tells 5,000 years of economic history, arguing that history can be seen as a cycle between debt-based and money-based societies. He explains that the first money-based societies were largely an outgrowth of imperialism, war finance, and slavery. The general idea is that imperial states began to raise professional …

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