有人说金钱能推动世界运转。作为交易中不可缺少的一环,“钱”这一概念将会怎样改变?从以物易物式的古老经济制度到如今使用现金、信用卡、甚至是网络虚拟货币等支付手段,人们对金钱的定义和理解在不断地更新。
How do you pay for things in a shop? Perhaps you like the
tangible1 reliability2 of hard cash? Maybe the financial
flexibility3 of a credit card suits you better? Or perhaps you prefer the simple convenience of a smartphone?
Whatever you use today, experts believe all these methods could soon become
outdated4. Instead, we will use our bodies: our eyes, our
fingerprints5, even our
mere6 presence in the store. In fact it's happening already. Amazon are trialling stores which have no
checkouts7, where technology tracks the items you've taken from the shelves and
deducts8 the total from your account when you leave the shop.
French supermarket Monoprix takes a different path: you choose your groceries and leave them with a human cashier. You then leave the shop while the cashier
tallies9 up your bill, charges your account, and organises delivery to your home.
Amir Sajed, chief executive of Barclaycard, told the BBC that such new developments spell the end of the plastic credit card. Instead, wearable items such as rings,
bracelets10 and keychains will carry chips that allow shoppers to "seamlessly shop, going between the web, an app or in store," he says.
And while all the above payment methods are
underpinned11 by accounts held in traditional currencies, let's not forget the rise of alternatives such as Litecoin. Such virtual currencies can rise in value very quickly, but are also
susceptible12 to crashes and threats from
hackers13. Who knows, perhaps something totally new will take off that changes money as we know it? One such possibility is explored in the movie In Time. It imagines a futuristic society in which the currency is time itself, where people trade the amount of time they have left to live.
Or perhaps we'd do better to wind back the clock to the simpler financial world of the
barter14 economy. While the term
conjures15 images of sacks of grain and
herds16 of sheep being exchanged in ancient times, there are signs that
bartering17 is making a comeback in today's world of modern technology. Startup Let's Barter India has developed an app which facilitates the exchange of goods, and already has around 100,000 members.
Maybe the only thing we know for certain is that money will keep evolving.