11. From Barter to Money​

Chapter 11: From Barter to Money

Big Questions: How did people exchange before money? Why did money arise? How did it evolve—from shells & coins to notes & digital UPI?

Grade 7 • Economics Mobile-friendly Comic Sans MS Quick Revision + Deep Notes

1) What is Barter?

Barter System = exchanging goods/services directly for other goods/services (no money). Example: swap an extra eraser for a pencil you need.

Global snapshots

  • Rai stones (Yap, Micronesia) – huge stone discs used as “money”.
  • Tajadero (Aztec copper “knife” money) – Mesoamerica.
  • Tevau (red feather coils) – Solomon Islands.

Desi snapshots

  • Cowries, salt, tea, tobacco, cattle, seeds often used to barter.
  • Junbeel Mela (Assam): living barter fair among Tiwa, Karbi, Khasi, Jaintia communities.

Barter today?

  • Book-swap clubs 📚
  • Old clothes ↔️ utensils exchange
  • Neighbourly skill swaps (help for help)
Key terms: Transaction, Commodities, Barter, Money.

2) Why did Money arise? — Problems with Barter

Imagine a farmer wants shoes, a sweater & medicines but only has an ox to spare. Pure barter creates many hurdles:

Double coincidence of wants: Both sides must want exactly what the other offers.

No common standard of value: How many bags of wheat for one sweater?

Indivisibility: You can’t give “half an ox” for a sweater!

Portability: Lugging wheat/ox around is hard.

Durability: Wheat can rot; pests can eat it.

Storage & safety: Storing bulky commodities is risky & costly.

Therefore: Society needed a commonly accepted tool for exchange → Money.

3) Basic Functions of Money

Core 4

  • Medium of exchange – buy/sell smoothly.
  • Unit of account – common measure of value; price comparison easy.
  • Store of value – can be saved to buy later (unlike perishable wheat).
  • Standard of deferred payment – pay part now, part later.
Try this: You have ₹50; book costs ₹100. If the shopkeeper lets you pay ₹50 now and ₹50 later, money is acting as a standard of deferred payment.

4) The Journey of Money (India — broad timeline)

Barter ➜ Cowries & commodities ➜ Metal coins (~600 BCE) ➜ Paper money (late 18th c.) ➜ Cards/ATMs ➜ Net banking ➜ UPI & QR (2016→)

4.1 Coinage (Metal Money)

  • Minting: rulers issued coins; their acceptance spread trade across regions.
  • Metals: gold, silver, copper; also alloys for strength.
  • Early Indian terms: kārṣhāpaṇa / paṇa / pana. (Echoes today in paṇam—Tamil/Telugu/Malayalam; haṇa—Kannada.)
  • Obverse/Reverse motifs: animals, trees, hills, deities, royal emblems (e.g., Chalukya Varāha, Chola tiger).
  • Evidence of trade: Roman gold coins found in Pudukkottai (TN) → strong Indo-Roman trade; coins found in Kerala/TN show active maritime trade.
Fun fact: Pre-decimal units: 1 anna = 1/16 rupee. In 1947, one anna could buy a dozen bananas!
₹ symbol (2010): Designed by Udaya Kumar. Mix of Devanagari “र” + Roman “R” with two horizontal lines (flag stripes & “equals”).

4.2 Paper Money (Currency Notes)

  • First used in China; came to India in the late 18th century.
  • Coins = small denominations; notes = higher denominations.
  • RBI (Reserve Bank of India) is the only legal issuer of Indian currency notes.
  • Notes celebrate culture (reverse-side motifs) and include tactile marks for the visually impaired.

4.3 New Forms — Digital Money

  • Cards: Debit/Credit; ATMs.
  • Net banking, UPI, QR codes → instant bank-to-bank transfer. Even street vendors accept QR payments.
  • Digital = intangible (electronic) but fully valid money.
Safety first: Keep UPI PIN secret, verify receiver name before paying, and use trusted apps only.

5) Living Barter Traditions (Culture & Community)

  • Junbeel Mela (Assam): 500-year-old barter fair; roots, herbs, forest goods exchanged for rice foods; starts with Agni Puja.
  • Book exchange clubs: swap read books for new stories.
  • Old clothes ↔️ utensils: recycling & re-use economy.
Think: What makes barter work smoothly in such fairs? (trust, community rules, agreed values, repeated interactions)

6) Quick Recap (Before we move on…)

  • Barter came first; many commodities worked as “proto-money”.
  • Barter problems (double coincidence, divisibility, portability, durability) led to money.
  • Money evolved: shells → coins → paper currency → digital payments.
  • In India, RBI alone issues currency; coins/notes carry cultural motifs & security features.
  • Digital rails (UPI/QR) make payments fast, cheap, and inclusive.

7) Glossary (Sweet & Short)

TermMeaning
BarterDirect exchange of goods/services without money.
Double coincidence of wantsEach party must want what the other offers.
Unit of accountCommon yardstick to price and compare goods/services.
Store of valueAbility to save purchasing power for future.
Deferred paymentPayment made later; money allows credit/instalments.
MintingManufacturing coins in a mint.
AlloyMix of metals to improve strength/durability.
Obverse/Reverse“Head” side / “Tail” side of a coin.
RBIReserve Bank of India—issues notes; banker to banks.
UPI/QRDigital systems that move money account-to-account instantly.

8) Let’s Explore (Mini Activities)

  • Value Detective: Check the reverse of ₹50 & ₹100 notes. Identify the heritage motifs and google their stories.
  • Coin Hunt: Collect 5 coins from different years. Note metal feel, year, motifs, edge. What changed and why?
  • UPI Safety Pledge: Write 3 rules you’ll always follow while paying digitally.
  • Anna Math: If 1 rupee = 16 annas, how many annas = ₹3.5? Ans: 56 annas

9) Practice Corner (Matches the Chapter’s Questions)

  1. How does barter work? Name common barter commodities.
    Direct exchange without money; commodities include cowries, salt, tea, tobacco, cloth, cattle, seeds, etc.
  2. List limitations of barter.
    Double coincidence, no standard value, indivisibility, portability, durability, storage/safety.
  3. Salient features of ancient Indian coins.
    Minted by rulers; precious metals/alloys; punch-marks/motifs; obverse/reverse designs; terms like paṇa; evidence of maritime trade.
  4. How has money transformed?
    Barter → shells/commodities → metal coins → paper notes (RBI) → cards/ATMs → net banking → UPI/QR digital money.
  5. How could Indian coins become accepted across borders?
    Stable metal content, trusted rulers, standard weights, wide trade networks, consistent motifs & acceptability.
  6. Arthaśhāstra snippet: 60 paṇas/year ≈ one āḍhaka (~3 kg) grain/day; fine for not helping neighbour = 100 paṇas. ⇒ A paṇa had high value; the law promoted social responsibility.
Noodles = Notes + Doodles You’ve got this! 💪

Chapter 11: From Barter to Money — Exercise Pack (with Answers)

Covers: Textbook exercises + One-word answers + Fill in the blanks + True/False + Very short & Short answers. Designed for easy mobile reading.

A) Textbook Exercise Questions — Answers

  1. How does the barter system take place and what kinds of commodities were used?
    In barter, people directly exchange goods/services without money when both parties want what the other has. Common barter commodities included cowrie shells, salt, tea, tobacco, cloth, cattle, seeds and other everyday produce.
  2. What were the limitations of the barter system?
    (i) Double coincidence of wants, (ii) no common standard of value, (iii) indivisibility of some goods, (iv) poor portability, (v) low durability/perishability, and (vi) storage/safety issues.
  3. What were the salient features of ancient Indian coins?
    Issued by rulers; made of precious metals/alloys (gold, silver, copper); known as kārṣhāpaṇa/paṇa; carried punch-marks/motifs on obverse & reverse (animals, deities, emblems); standard weights aiding trade; finds like Roman coins in Tamil Nadu show active maritime trade.
  4. How has money as a medium of exchange transformed over time?
    Barter → commodity money (cowries, salt) → metal coinage (~600 BCE) → paper currency (late 18th c. in India) → plastic cards/ATMs → net-banking → digital payments via UPI/QR. Through each stage money became easier to carry, store and standardise.
  5. What steps might have been taken so Indian coins became accepted across countries?
    Standard metal purity & weights; clear royal symbols & consistent minting; wide circulation through trade routes; political stability; agreements with foreign merchants; reliable scales and assays at ports; penalties against debasement/counterfeiting.
  6. Arthaśhāstra lines: 60 paṇas/year ≈ 1 āḍhaka (~3 kg) grain per day. What does this show about value of one paṇa? Fine for not helping neighbour was 100 paṇas — what value does this promote?
    60 paṇas ≈ 365 āḍhakas ⇒ 1 paṇa ≈ 6.08 āḍhakas ≈ ~18.25 kg grain — showing high purchasing power. A 100-paṇa fine (greater than annual salary) strongly incentivised social duty, mutual aid and community welfare.
  7. SKIT (cowries as money):
    Suggested script outline: Scene 1: Barter chaos (no double coincidence). Scene 2: Village elder proposes cowries—portable, divisible, durable. Scene 3: Market stall signs prices in cowries; disputes drop. Scene 4: Rules—standard shell size/weight, no broken shells, common measures. Outcome: smoother trade.
  8. RBI & security features of notes (sample findings):
    Watermark (Mahatma Gandhi & numeral), security thread, see-through register, micro-lettering, intaglio (raised) printing, latent image, optically variable ink (₹500/₹2000 legacy), colour-shift thread, fluorescence under UV, accurate serial numbers, tactile marks for visually impaired.
  9. Interview on cash vs UPI — sample summary:
    Many shopkeepers prefer UPI for speed, exact amounts, no change handling, and easy records; some prefer cash for network outages or tiny purchases. Families mix both—elders often cash-first; youth/urban users favour UPI for convenience and safety.

B) One-Word Answer Questions (10)

  1. Direct exchange of goods for goods is called ______. Ans: Barter
  2. The sole authority issuing Indian currency notes: ______. Ans: RBI
  3. UPI stands for ______. Ans: Unified Payments Interface
  4. The “head” side of a coin is the ______. Ans: Obverse
  5. A mixture of metals is an ______. Ans: Alloy
  6. Barter requires a double ______ of wants. Ans: Coincidence
  7. Ability to carry easily is ______. Ans: Portability
  8. Ability to split into smaller units is ______. Ans: Divisibility
  9. Ancient Indian coin was called ______ / ______. Ans: Kārṣhāpaṇa / Paṇa
  10. First regular paper money was used in ______. Ans: China

C) Fill in the Blanks (10)

  1. In barter, goods are exchanged for ______. Ans: goods/services
  2. A common yardstick for prices is called the ______ of account. Ans: unit
  3. One anna was equal to ______ of a rupee. Ans: 1/16
  4. The two sides of a coin are the ______ and the ______. Ans: obverse, reverse
  5. Paper currency in India today is issued only by the ______. Ans: Reserve Bank of India
  6. Digital payments by scanning a square image usually use a ______ code. Ans: QR
  7. Coins often used ______ to make them stronger. Ans: alloys
  8. Money kept for future purchases shows the function “store of ______.” Ans: value
  9. Finding someone who wants exactly what you offer is the double ______ of wants. Ans: coincidence
  10. The ₹ symbol was officially adopted in the year ______. Ans: 2010

D) True/False with Explanations (10)

  1. Barter requires a double coincidence of wants. — True
    Because both parties must want each other’s goods at the same time.
  2. Wheat is an excellent long-term store of value. — False
    It is perishable; can rot or be eaten by pests.
  3. Any scheduled bank can legally print currency in India. — False
    Only the RBI issues currency notes.
  4. Paper money was used in India before metal coins. — False
    Metal coins predate the arrival of paper currency.
  5. UPI is a digital method to transfer money between bank accounts. — True
  6. The obverse is the tail side of a coin. — False
    Obverse is the head; reverse is the tail.
  7. All coins are made only from pure metals, never alloys. — False
    Alloys are common for strength/durability.
  8. Money helps compare values of different goods. — True
    It acts as a unit of account.
  9. One anna equalled one-tenth of a rupee. — False
    It equalled 1/16 of a rupee.
  10. Roman coins found in Tamil Nadu suggest ancient overseas trade. — True

E) Very Short Answer Questions (2–3 lines each) — 10

  1. Define money and write two functions.
    Money is a commonly accepted medium of exchange. It serves as (i) a medium of exchange and (ii) a unit of account; it also acts as store of value and standard of deferred payment.
  2. State two limitations of barter.
    Needs double coincidence of wants; lacks a common standard of value, making fair pricing hard.
  3. What do motifs on ancient coins tell us?
    They reveal rulers, deities, symbols and trade links—helping date coins, identify regions, and infer economic contact.
  4. Why did paper currency become necessary?
    Large payments in coins were heavy to carry/store; notes solved portability, storage and counting issues.
  5. Give two examples of living barter.
    Junbeel Mela (Assam) exchanges produce; household old-clothes-for-utensils swaps.
  6. What is the obverse and reverse of a coin?
    Obverse is the “head” side; reverse is the “tail” side—both carry distinct designs.
  7. Explain “store of value”.
    Money can be saved now and used later without losing value quickly, unlike perishable goods.
  8. Who issues Indian currency notes?
    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is the sole issuer.
  9. What is UPI?
    Unified Payments Interface—an instant, bank-to-bank digital payment system using VPA/QR.
  10. Why were alloys used in coins?
    To improve hardness, durability and reduce wear, while controlling cost and purity.

F) Short Answer Questions (3–4 lines each) — 10

  1. Explain how money solves the double coincidence problem.
    With money, you don’t need the seller to want your good; you pay in a universally accepted medium, breaking the need for mutual wants.
  2. Describe the evolution of money in India in brief.
    From barter and commodity money to metal coins (~600 BCE), paper currency (late 18th c.), then cards/ATMs, and now UPI/QR digital payments.
  3. How do security features protect currency?
    Watermarks, threads, micro-text, intaglio print and colour-shift elements make counterfeiting difficult and help the public verify notes.
  4. Give evidence that Indian regions traded overseas in ancient times.
    Finds of Roman gold coins in Pudukkottai and coins along Kerala/TN coasts indicate active maritime trade networks.
  5. Why is money a better store of value than wheat?
    Money doesn’t rot or get eaten by pests, is compact to store, and retains purchasing power for future purchases.
  6. What made paper money practical?
    Light weight, easy counting, higher denominations, and centralised issuance (RBI) ensured trust and convenience.
  7. List two ways coins aided trade across regions.
    Standard weights/purity built trust; recognisable royal symbols eased acceptance by distant merchants.
  8. How does UPI help small vendors?
    Instant payments to bank accounts via QR, no need for change, easy records, and wide customer acceptance.
  9. Give two reasons barter still appears today.
    Community traditions (e.g., fairs) and practical reuse/exchange (books, clothes↔utensils) without cash outlay.
  10. What does the Arthaśhāstra fine (100 paṇas) indicate?
    It signals strong social expectations: aiding neighbours was a duty; penalties were set high to uphold community welfare.
Chapter 11Exercises ReadyComic Sans MS

Use these for classwork, homework, or quick revision. All answers align with the chapter text.

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