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33 Perspectives on the future of cash from a political, economic and philosophical viewpoint
Over the past 20 years, euro cash has become a tangible symbol of economic integration and cohesion in Europe. It stands for stability and trust, especially in times of crisis. However, a look ahead at what the future holds for Europe's single currency suggests there are some specific challenges looming. For example, the new forms of payment and so-called cryptocurrencies that the digital turn has ushered in have cast fundamental doubt on the status of cash and government-issued currencies. The…mehr

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33 Perspectives on the future of cash from a political, economic and philosophical viewpoint

Over the past 20 years, euro cash has become a tangible symbol of economic integration and cohesion in Europe. It stands for stability and trust, especially in times of crisis. However, a look ahead at what the future holds for Europe's single currency suggests there are some specific challenges looming. For example, the new forms of payment and so-called cryptocurrencies that the digital turn has ushered in have cast fundamental doubt on the status of cash and government-issued currencies. The authors of this book provide a nuanced overview of the topic by looking at multiple aspects of money and currency from different angles. This affords a new sense of perspective in the often vehement debate over the future of our money.

With essays by Otmar Issing, Clemens Fuest, Hans-Jürgen Papier, Peter Sloterdijk, Barry Eichengreen, Viviana Zelizer and Gaspard Koenig.

Ausstattung: mit zahlreichen farbigen Abbildungen
Autorenporträt
Beermann, JohannesProfessor Johannes Beermann was born in 1960 in Emsdetten, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. He studied law at LMU in Munich and obtained his doctorate at the University of Münster. In 2020 he was made an honorary professor at the Mittweida University of Applied Sciences. He served as Chief of the State Chancellery and Minister of State for Federal and European Affairs in the Free State of Saxony from 2008 to 2014, before taking up his current post at the Bundesbank in 2015 as the member of the Executive Board responsible for cash management.