The value of money
- by ambreesh
A dictionary definition of money is "any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, anddemand  deposits".
 If you ask an economist for a definition of money, you will be 
introduced to terms like M1, M2, M3, all of which denote tangible assets
 - currency, and anything that is liquid enough to be used as currency; 
checks, stamps and now mobile minutes being examples. The macroeconomic 
theory of money is fascinating - the effect of money supply on exchange 
rates and interest rates, the concept of the "money multiplier" (if I 
deposit $10 into a bank, the bank will likely loan $8 of it to someone 
else, who will then give it to someone else in exchange for goods and 
services, who will then likely deposit it again, which will result in 
the bank loaning it again and so on - making that $10 of money supply 
worth a lot more ($10+$8+$x+...)).    But
 all this depends on money supply - in other words, money that is 
printed by the mint. The Treasury Department spends a lot of time 
figuring out how much money to print, there is lot being written on QE2 
now-a-days, which is intended to increase the money supply.  Money is used to purchase goods and services, and yes it is saved too but that is so one can purchase goods and services later.   Completely unrelated, there is a sea change occurring in the web world, dominated by, I believe, Facebook.
 With 500M active users and growing, FB has the ability to introduce a 
"money supply" which is completely unrelated to today's "money". Using 
today's money, a FB user can buy a certain number of FB$s, and then use 
the FB$s within FB to purchase goods and services - with the money 
multiplier kicking in. I remember talking with a colleague about this a 
few years ago, the true way to monetize the web is to introduce an 
alternative system to the existing, and FB has the ability to do just 
that. There is enough momentum, enough mass for FB to start to monetize 
its user base. And completely screw up the economists at the Treasury, 
not to mention disintermediating the banks completely.   The
 only other ubiquitous asset is mobile minutes. People exchanging mobile
 minutes for tangible goods and services happens today, the big 
difference however is the demographic. While Safaricom offers this 
ability in Kenya today, FB has the 15-40 year middle class user as their
 user. And the next generation is growing up with FB as a standard 
channel for communicating with their peers.   Virtual
 flowers when going in for the kill? If your target is an avid FB user, 
why not? It certainly is a lot more green - no pun intended!