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      The Impact of Money on an African Subsistence Economy

      The Journal of Economic History
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          It has often been claimed that money was to be found in much of the African continent before the impact of the European world and the extension of trade made coinage general. When we examine these claims, however, they tend to evaporate or to emerge as tricks of definition. It is an astounding fact that economists have, for decades, been assigning three or four qualities to money when they discuss it with reference to our own society or to those of the medieval and modern world, yet the moment they have gone to ancient history or to the societies and economies studied by anthropologists they have sought the “real” nature of money by allowing only one of these defining characteristics to dominate their definitions.

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          Dahomean Marriage A Revaluation

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            Notes on Comparative Economics

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              applab
              The Journal of Economic History
              J. Eco. History
              Cambridge University Press (CUP)
              0022-0507
              1471-6372
              December 1959
              February 2011
              : 19
              : 04
              : 491-503
              Article
              10.1017/S0022050700085946
              f4433f96-2835-4123-9384-99b944292400
              © 1959
              History

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