CH11 FROM BARTER TO MONEY

CLASS 7 | EXPLORING SOCIETY: INDIA AND BEYOND

CHAPTER 11

FROM BARTER TO MONEY

Economic Life Around Us

 

📌  CHAPTER AT A GLANCE

•      Barter system = exchanging goods for goods, without money

•      Problems of barter: double coincidence of wants, no common standard of value, divisibility, portability, durability

•      Functions of money: medium of exchange, store of value, standard of deferred payment, common measure of value

•      Evolution of money: Barter → Cowrie shells → Metal coins → Paper money → Digital payments (UPI)

•      RBI (Reserve Bank of India) controls the issue of currency in India

•      ₹ symbol designed by Udaya Kumar (IIT Bombay) in 2010

 

📖  STUDY NOTES

 

1. THE BARTER SYSTEM

 

Definition: The barter system is a way of exchanging goods and services without using money.

It was the earliest form of exchange — practised worldwide for thousands of years.

 

Commodities Used in Barter (items exchanged):

🐚 Cowrie Shells

🧂 Salt & Tea

🐄 Cattle

🌾 Seeds & Grain

🧵 Cloth & Tobacco

 

Examples of Unusual Money Around the World:

Example

Details

Rai Stones (Yap Island, Micronesia)

Giant stone discs used as money; very heavy and hard to move!

Aztec Copper Tajadero (Central Mexico)

Copper chopping-knife-shaped money used in Central America

Tevau (Solomon Islands)

Red feather coil made from birds’ feathers

Junbeel Mela (Assam, India)

Annual barter fair in Morigaon district; communities from Assam and Meghalaya exchange local products; started in 15th century

 

2. PROBLEMS / LIMITATIONS OF THE BARTER SYSTEM

 

Problem

Meaning & Example

🔄 Double Coincidence of Wants

Both parties must want exactly what the other has. Example: A farmer with wheat must find someone who BOTH has shoes AND wants wheat. Very hard to find!

⚖️ No Common Standard Measure of Value

Hard to compare values. How many kg of wheat = 1 pair of shoes? No agreed exchange rate.

✂️ Divisibility Problem

You can’t cut an ox in half to pay for a sweater! Some goods are indivisible.

🚶 Portability Problem

Hard to carry large/heavy goods (e.g., bags of wheat) from place to place.

🐀 Durability Problem

Perishable goods (like wheat or vegetables) rot or get eaten by rats. Cannot be stored for long.

 

3. BASIC FUNCTIONS OF MONEY

 

Why did money come into existence?

As trade grew and barter became too difficult, people needed a common medium of exchange that was portable, durable, divisible, and widely accepted. Money was invented to solve all the problems of barter!

 

Function of Money

What It Means

💱 Medium of Exchange

Money is accepted by everyone for buying and selling goods and services. Solves double coincidence of wants.

🏦 Store of Value

Money can be saved and used later. Unlike wheat, money doesn’t rot! Solves the durability problem.

📏 Measure of Value (Common Denomination)

Money gives everything a price. We can compare any two goods by their prices. Solves the problem of no common standard.

⏳ Standard of Deferred Payment

We can buy now and pay later (e.g., loans, credit). Money is accepted as a way to make future payments.

 

4. THE JOURNEY OF MONEY — EVOLUTION TIMELINE

 

Period

Form of Money

Key Details

6000 BCE

🔄 Barter

Direct exchange of goods & services; commodities like grain, cattle, cloth, shells used

1000 BCE

🐚 Cowrie Shells

Widely used as money across many parts of India and the world; portable and durable

600 BCE

🪙 Metal Coins

Coins made of gold, silver, copper, iron; called kārṣhāpaṇas or paṇas; symbols (rūpas) punched on them

Late 18th century

📄 Paper Money

First used in China; introduced in India in the late 18th century; easier to carry than coins

1861

📜 Official Paper Currency

Government of India officially started paper currency in India

1980

💳 Debit/Credit Cards

Digital money — transferable electronically; no physical exchange needed

2016

📱 UPI / Digital

Unified Payments Interface launched in India; QR codes, mobile payments, net banking

 

5. COINAGE IN INDIA — KEY FACTS

 

•      Early coins were issued by rulers — each kingdom had its own coinage.

•      Minting (making coins) was controlled entirely by rulers.

•      Powerful rulers’ coins were accepted across many kingdoms — boosted inter-regional trade.

•      Coins made from: gold, silver, copper, iron, and their alloys (alloys make coins stronger).

•      Called: kārṣhāpaṇas or paṇas. Symbols called rūpas were punched on them.

•      Obverse = head side (with main design); Reverse = tail side.

•      Symbols included: nature motifs, animals, trees, hills, kings/queens, and deities.

•      Chalukya coins: Varaha (avatar of Vishnu) on one side, three-tiered parasol on the other.

•      Chola coins: Silver coin with tiger emblem (850–1279 CE).

•      Roman gold coins found in Pudukkottai, Tamil Nadu → proves India’s maritime trade with Rome.

 

💡  Fun Facts about Indian Coinage:

•      The word ‘paṇa’ → becomes ‘paṇam’ in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and ‘haṇa’ in Kannada — meaning money even today!

•      1 anna = 1/16 of a rupee. In 1947, one anna could buy a dozen bananas.

•      Today’s coins are iron alloys containing chromium, silicon, and carbon.

•      The ₹ symbol was designed in 2010 by Udaya Kumar (IIT Bombay) — a mix of Devanagari ‘Ra’ and Roman ‘R’ with two horizontal stripes (representing the national flag).

 

6. PAPER MONEY & NEW FORMS OF MONEY

 

Why paper money came about:

•      Carrying large numbers of coins became difficult and problematic.

•      Paper money was first used in China and introduced in India in the late 18th century.

•      Coins are used for smaller denominations; paper notes are used for higher denominations.

Indian Currency Denominations:

•      Coins: 50 paise, ₹1, ₹2, ₹5, ₹10, ₹20

•      Notes: ₹10, ₹20, ₹50, ₹100, ₹200, ₹500

Today’s Currency Authority:

•      Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is the ONLY legal authority to issue currency notes in India.

•      It is illegal for anyone else to print currency notes.

•      RBI introduces security features to prevent counterfeiting (fake notes).

 

📱  New / Digital Forms of Money:

•      Debit cards / Credit cards — linked to bank accounts; transfer money electronically.

•      Net banking — perform transactions online via the internet.

•      UPI (Unified Payments Interface) — launched in 2016; transfer money using mobile phones instantly.

•      QR Code — ‘quick-response’ code; black & white squares readable by smartphones; used for payments.

•      All digital forms are intangible (cannot touch and feel) — electronic form of money.

 

7. KEY TERMS GLOSSARY

 

TERM

MEANING

Barter System

Exchanging goods and services without using money

Commodity

Products or goods that can be traded, bought, and sold

Transaction

A piece of business done between people; an act of buying or selling

Money

Common tool accepted by everyone for making or receiving payments for goods/services

Double Coincidence of Wants

Both parties must want exactly what the other is offering to exchange

Common Standard Measure of Value

An agreed-upon worth for goods/services that helps in comparing their value

Divisibility

Capacity of an object to be split into pieces or portions

Portability

Ability of an object to be carried or moved from one place to another

Durability

Trait that indicates how long an object can be stored without damage

Medium of Exchange

Something commonly accepted to facilitate transactions

Store of Value

Ability to save money and use it in the future

Minting

Process of producing coins; a Mint is the facility that makes coins

Alloy

A metal made by combining two or more metallic elements (makes coins stronger)

Kārṣhāpaṇas / Paṇas

Names for ancient Indian coins; symbols called rūpas were punched on them

Obverse

Head side of a coin (bearing the main/principal design)

Currency

System of money used in a particular country (e.g., Indian Rupee)

Denomination

Units in which coins and notes are classified (e.g., ₹10, ₹50, ₹100)

RBI

Reserve Bank of India — the only legal authority to issue currency in India

QR Code

Quick-response code; black-and-white squares used to make digital payments

UPI

Unified Payments Interface — digital payment system launched in India in 2016

 

 

 

✏️  WORKSHEET & EXERCISE ANSWERS

Chapter 11 — From Barter to Money  |  All Questions Answered

 

SECTION A: TEXTBOOK EXERCISE QUESTIONS (Q1–Q9)

 

Q1. How does the barter system take place and what commodities were used?

Answer:

•      In the barter system, people directly exchanged goods or services for other goods or services — without using money.

•      Both parties had to agree on a fair exchange. Example: A farmer with extra grain exchanges it for cloth from a weaver.

Commodities used for exchange:

•      Cowrie shells, salt, tea, tobacco, cloth, cattle (cows, goats, horses, sheep), and seeds.

•      Unusual examples: Rai stones (giant rock discs) in Micronesia; Aztec copper Tajadero in Central America; Red feather coils (Tevau) in the Solomon Islands.

 

Q2. What were the limitations of the barter system?

Answer: The barter system had five major limitations:

•      1. Double Coincidence of Wants: Both parties must want each other’s goods at the same time. Very hard to find!

•      2. No Common Standard Measure of Value: No agreed way to compare the value of goods (how much wheat = one pair of shoes?).

•      3. Divisibility: You can’t divide an ox to exchange for a sweater — some goods cannot be split.

•      4. Portability: Carrying heavy goods (like bags of wheat) over long distances was very difficult.

•      5. Durability: Perishable goods (grain, vegetables) would rot or get eaten by rats — cannot store value long-term.

 

Q3. What were the salient features of ancient Indian coins?

Answer:

•      Made from precious metals: gold, silver, copper, iron, or alloys (combining two metals makes coins stronger).

•      Called kārṣhāpaṇas or paṇas.

•      Had symbols (called rūpas) punched or engraved on them.

•      Obverse (head side): main design such as deities, kings/queens, symbols of the ruling dynasty.

•      Reverse (tail side): other motifs — nature symbols like animals, trees, hills.

•      Example: Chalukya coins had a Varaha (avatar of Vishnu) on one side and a three-tiered royal parasol on the other.

•      Chola coins: silver coin with tiger emblem (850–1279 CE).

•      Rulers controlled minting. Over time, powerful rulers’ coins were accepted across different kingdoms.

•      Helped boost maritime trade — Roman gold coins found in Pudukkottai, Tamil Nadu show trade between India and Rome.

 

Q4. How has money as a medium of exchange transformed over time?

Answer: Money has evolved in several stages:

•      Stage 1 — Barter (6000 BCE): Direct exchange of goods without money.

•      Stage 2 — Commodity Money (~1000 BCE): Cowrie shells and other items used as money.

•      Stage 3 — Metal Coinage (~600 BCE): Gold, silver, copper coins issued by rulers. Provided portability and a common standard of value.

•      Stage 4 — Paper Money (late 18th century in India): Easier to carry than coins; first used in China. Government officially issued paper currency in India in 1861.

•      Stage 5 — Digital Money (1980–present): Debit/credit cards (from 1980s), net banking, and UPI (2016). Completely intangible — exists only electronically.

•      Each stage solved problems of the previous form and made trade easier.

 

Q5. What steps might have been taken in ancient times so that Indian coins could become the medium of exchange across countries?

Answer:

•      Trade relationships were built between kingdoms — traders regularly visited each other’s territories.

•      Coins of powerful rulers were consistently made of reliable metals (gold, silver) with known purity — this built trust.

•      Maritime trade routes connected India with Rome, Arabia, Southeast Asia — traders from these regions began accepting Indian coins.

•      Common symbols and weight standards on coins made them recognisable and trustworthy to foreign traders.

•      Evidence: Roman gold coins found in Pudukkottai (Tamil Nadu) show Indian and Roman traders were using coins interchangeably, suggesting India’s trade was favourable.

 

Q6. Arthashastra question: 60 panas annual salary = one adhaka of grain/day. What does this indicate about the value of one pana? Fine for failing to help a neighbour = 100 panas.

Answer:

Part 1 — Value of one paṇa:

•      Annual salary = 60 paṇas; equivalent to 1 āḍhaka of grain per day (for 4 meals).

•      1 āḍhaka ≈ 3 kg. So the annual grain equivalent = 365 × 3 kg = 1,095 kg of grain.

•      This means 1 paṇa ≈ about 18 kg of grain. Paṇas were clearly a significant unit of value.

Part 2 — Fine of 100 paṇas for not helping a neighbour:

•      The fine (100 paṇas) was more than a year’s salary (60 paṇas)!

•      Conclusion: Society placed very high value on helping your neighbour — community responsibility was considered more important than personal wealth.

•      This shows ancient Indian society deeply valued mutual support, cooperation, and social duty (it was reflected in law).

 

Q7. Write a short skit showing how people persuaded each other to use cowrie shells as money.

Answer — Sample Skit: ‘The Shell Solution’

Characters: Rama (farmer), Leela (cloth-weaver), Mohan (merchant)

 

Mohan: Friends! I am tired of carrying baskets of grain everywhere just to buy cloth!

Rama: Yes! Last week I wanted your shoes, Leela, but you wanted fish, not wheat!

Leela: Exactly. We need something everyone will accept.

Mohan: (holds up a cowrie shell) What about these cowrie shells? They are easy to carry, don’t rot, and we can all agree on how many shells a pair of shoes or a bag of grain is worth!

Rama: Hmm… but will everyone accept them?

Mohan: Yes! They are found across our land, they are small and portable, and they look the same — easy to count!

Leela: I agree! Let us all decide: 10 cowries for a bag of grain, 20 for a length of cloth!

All: Agreed! Trade is now easy!

 

[Key message: Cowrie shells solved the problems of portability and common standard of value.]

 

Q8. Security features RBI uses to prevent illegal printing of currency notes.

Answer:

•      Watermark: A translucent image (like Gandhi’s portrait) visible when held against light — cannot be photocopied.

•      Security Thread: A metallic or plastic strip embedded in the note that reads ‘भारत’ and ‘RBI’.

•      Microprinting: Very tiny text printed on the note visible only under magnification.

•      Colour-Shifting Ink: The numeral changes colour when tilted (e.g., ₹500 note numeral shifts from green to blue).

•      Intaglio Printing: Raised print that you can feel with your fingers — helps visually impaired identify notes.

•      Unique Serial Number: Each note has a unique serial number — impossible to duplicate.

•      Fluorescent Ink: Ink visible under ultraviolet (UV) light.

 

Q9. Cash vs UPI — what are the preferences and why?

Answer (Sample responses from family/shopkeeper interview):

Person

Preference

Reason

Elderly family member

Cash (coins & notes)

Familiar with physical money; doesn’t use smartphone

Young adult

UPI / Phone Pay

Fast, easy, no need to carry cash; can track expenses

Small vegetable vendor

Both

Some customers pay by UPI; some prefer cash; both accepted

Shop owner

UPI preferred

No risk of accepting fake notes; easy record-keeping

 

SECTION B: IN-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

 

Think About It — Difficulties of Barter (Farmer’s Story):

•      The farmer faced: (1) finding someone who wanted an ox; (2) ox too large — hard to exchange for small items (divisibility); (3) no common agreed value — how many bags of wheat = shoes?; (4) transporting heavy wheat bags everywhere (portability); (5) storing leftover wheat — it would rot (durability).

 

Double Coincidence of Wants — Examples in Farmer’s Story:

•      Farmer needs shoes — he must find a shoemaker who wants an ox (or wheat). The shoemaker must also want exactly what the farmer has. This is a double coincidence.

•      Farmer exchanges ox for wheat — but then must find a shoe-seller who wants wheat, a sweater-seller who wants wheat, and a medicine-seller who wants wheat — all separately. Very difficult!

 

Ways Money Would Help the Farmer:

•      Sell the ox for money → use that money to separately buy shoes, sweater, and medicines from any seller.

•      No need to carry heavy goods; money is portable and easy to carry.

•      Money can be stored safely — won’t rot or be eaten by rats.

•      Prices in money make it easy to compare values and pay exact amounts.

 

 

 

📝  PRACTICE WORKSHEET

Chapter 11 — From Barter to Money  |  Test Your Knowledge!

 

Name: ___________________________    Class: _______    Date: ___________

 

PART 1: FILL IN THE BLANKS

 

  1. Exchanging goods and services without money is called the __________ system.
  2. The difficulty of finding someone who wants exactly what you have to offer is called __________ of wants.
  3. The inability to split goods like an ox for a small purchase is the problem of __________.
  4. The earliest Indian coins were called __________ or paṇas.
  5. The symbols engraved on ancient Indian coins were called __________.
  6. Roman gold coins excavated in __________ (Tamil Nadu) show India’s ancient trade links.
  7. Paper money was first used in __________ and introduced in India in the late __________ century.
  8. In India, the __________ is the only legal authority to issue currency.
  9. The ₹ symbol was designed by __________ in the year __________.
  10. UPI stands for __________ and was launched in India in __________.

 

PART 2: TRUE OR FALSE

 

  1. The barter system uses money to buy and sell goods. (True / False)
  2. Cowrie shells were used as a form of money in ancient India. (True / False)
  3. Double coincidence of wants is an advantage of the barter system. (True / False)
  4. Ancient Indian coins were called kārṣhāpaṇas. (True / False)
  5. Paper money was first used in India. (True / False)
  6. The RBI controls the minting of coins and printing of currency notes in India. (True / False)
  7. UPI allows people to transfer money electronically using a mobile phone. (True / False)
  8. One anna was equal to 1/8 of a rupee. (True / False)

 

PART 3: MATCH THE COLUMNS

 

Column A

 

Column B

Rai Stones

___

Ability of money to be saved for future use

Durability

___

Giant stone discs used as money in Micronesia

Store of Value

___

Ability of an item to last without damage

Junbeel Mela

___

Devanagari Ra + Roman R with two stripes

₹ Symbol

___

Annual barter fair in Morigaon, Assam

Minting

___

Process of making coins

 

PART 4: SHORT ANSWER

 

  1. What is the barter system? Give one example from daily life.

 

 

 

 

  1. List any three problems of the barter system.

 

 

 

 

  1. What are four functions of money?

 

 

 

 

  1. What is the significance of Roman coins found in Tamil Nadu?

 

 

 

 

  1. What is UPI and how is it different from using coins and notes?

 

 

 

 

ANSWER KEY

 

Fill in the Blanks:

•      1. barter   2. double coincidence   3. divisibility   4. kārṣhāpaṇas   5. rūpas

•      6. Pudukkottai   7. China; 18th   8. Reserve Bank of India (RBI)   9. Udaya Kumar; 2010   10. Unified Payments Interface; 2016

 

True or False:

•      1. False   2. True   3. False (it’s a problem/limitation)   4. True   5. False (first used in China)

•      6. True   7. True   8. False (1/16 of a rupee)

 

Match the Columns:

•      Rai Stones → Giant stone discs used as money in Micronesia

•      Durability → Ability of an item to last without damage

•      Store of Value → Ability of money to be saved for future use

•      Junbeel Mela → Annual barter fair in Morigaon, Assam

•      ₹ Symbol → Devanagari Ra + Roman R with two stripes

•      Minting → Process of making coins

 



Scroll to Top