We treat money as a tool, then forget it is designed. This book restores that memory. It shows how value becomes legible, how trust is manufactured, and why new forms of money change who gets to decide. If you want practical literacy without tribal noise, this is your map. Across centuries of monetary history, it follows the evolution of money from communal credit to programmable assets. You will learn a working value theory you can apply to coins, cards, and code, and a clear checklist for weighing trade offs between privacy, security, and flexibility. Along the way, you will see how trust in finance is built with institutions and algorithms, why digital assets matter beyond speculation, and where cryptocurrency history fits within older struggles over money and power. Readers looking for monetary policy basics and the wider architecture of financial systems will find concise explanations and human examples. For entrepreneurs, policy watchers, and curious citizens, this is a calm, rigorous guide to money as a social technology. It will not tell you what to buy. It will help you understand what you are looking at — and why design choices in money always become choices about society.
From Gold to Code
SKU: 9789374596722
$27.99 Regular Price
$21.12Sale Price
- Jahan Vespari writes at the intersection of money, technology, and everyday life. Over a decade of interviewing builders, traders, and civil servants has shaped a worldview that treats money as a human design problem before it is a technical one. Jahan’s work has appeared in independent publications and industry reports, and he has advised teams on clarity of communication rather than strategy or investment. Raised between market towns and megacities, he learned early how trust changes when prices, languages, and authorities shift. That sensibility runs through his writing: curious about systems, careful with claims, and grounded in lived use rather than hype. His mission is simple — give readers a sturdy way to judge new monetary ideas without fear or fervour.


















