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Virtual Money: Understanding the Power and Risks of Money's High-Speed Journey into Electronic Space
 
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Virtual Money: Understanding the Power and Risks of Money's High-Speed Journey into Electronic Space [Hardcover]

Elinor Harris Solomon (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0195097475 978-0195097474 October 30, 1997 First Edition
The amount of virtual money that circles the globe every day is truly staggering. The Federal Reserve's Fedwire and the New York-based CHIPS alone send out well over $2 trillion daily. Retail systems such as credit and debit cards deliver several hundred billion more. In fact, the combined dollar flow in one day equals over one-third of our gross domestic product for the entire year. Trillions of dollars of ethereal money soar around the globe, perched atop a very narrow "real" money base, and with the recent dramatic growth of the Internet, these vast numbers can only grow. In Virtual Money, the first book-length account of the electronic money phenomenon, economist Elinor Harris Solomon takes us on a fascinating tour of money's brave new world, offering an informative look at the pluses and minuses of virtual money in its myriad forms.
Solomon provides a wide ranging introduction to electronic monies, describing in down-to-earth terms how each system works. Starting on familiar ground, with gold and paper money, she examines the growth of the credit card from the mid-sixties, when it was a status symbol for the wealthy, to its present nearly universal use throughout America, and she offers an engaging discussion of exotic new e-monies, such as "Smart Cards," e-cash, electronic wallets, and cybermoney, as well as upcoming innovations such as electronic benefits transfers (EBT), which may replace food stamps by 1999. Equally important, the book offers a clear picture of the advantages and disadvantages of electronic money. Clearly there are great benefits to consumers, investors, and corporations, as goods and services competing in world markets can be purchased instantly from anywhere across the globe. Yet there are hazards as well. For instance, the very size of virtual money movements creates an enormous float that exceeds the amount of monetary reserves to back it up at any given moment. Digital glitches can mean chaos, as in 1995 when a snafu that delayed the opening of Wall Street's Big Board by just 60 minutes caused the Nasdaq Composite to fall 27 points. Moreover, we face increased risks of fraud, piracy, and invasion of privacy, as well as threats to national security. Solomon takes us inside the world of international money laundering--a three-hundred-billion-dollar-a-year business--to show how today's vast electronic wire transfers help conceal illegal activities. For example, in 1994, two agents for American Express Bank International were convicted on eleven counts of money laundering and four counts of deceiving the Federal Reserve. Their countless wire transfers of seven figures had proved far simpler than smuggling duffel bags of cash across the border.
Whether describing sophisticated encryption methods, or the Russian computer hacker who managed to steal $400,000 from Citicorp, or the behind-the-scenes transactions of a simple credit card charge, Virtual Money is an illuminating look at a very recent phenomenon, one that can only grow in importance.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

For most of us, the term virtual money means financial transactions into the Internet. But virtual money has been around for decades, since the first electronic-funds transfer. Even the mundane automatic teller machine runs on virtual money. Yet, as Solomon points out, until virtual money hit the Internet, most of us considered the topic deathly dull. Now that it's grabbed the headlines, she takes the opportunity to show us how it's been truly fascinating all along.

The book begins with a brief but firm grounding in how money developed, from the days of barter, through gold and currency, to plastic and electrons. She goes on to paint today's monetary world as a system both intricate in its complexity and Zen-like in its sensitivity, where corrections must be made with a light touch and where attempts to control it result in loss of control. She also looks at the intriguing cases that crop up as each new innovation gives the unscrupulous new ways to cheat the system and she examines how clever safeguards are eventually put into place.

Then, Solomon goes on to explore the still-developing future of virtual money. Here, we see not only the conveniences and benefits that will result but also the mechanics behind them, as intricate and mesmerizing as watchworks. Yet Solomon never overloads us with so much detail that tedium sets in. Instead, she shows us the pieces coming together like some organic, self-organizing puzzle and lets us both enjoy and anticipate its emerging form.

From Library Journal

With a background that includes service as a financial economist with the Federal Reserve Board and senior economist at the Department of Justice, Solomon has the credentials to provide an informed look at the pitfalls associated with virtual money. She uses this term to include technological innovations such as smart cards, electronic benefits transfers, E-cash, and other alternatives to cash made possible by electronic money transfers. After noting the ubiquitous presence of credit and debit cards, she describes more exotic forms of cybermoney and details the potential abuse that is introduced as electronic commerce embraces these forms of money transfer. Even though Solomon does a fine job of explaining an abstract concept not well covered in the journal literature, this is not for the casual reader.?Joseph Barth, U.S. Military Acad. Lib., West Point, N.Y.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; First Edition edition (October 30, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195097475
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195097474
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,278,715 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars OK, it's a bit academic, but I found it helpful., August 13, 2001
By 
JV "JV" (Buffalo, NY United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Virtual Money: Understanding the Power and Risks of Money's High-Speed Journey into Electronic Space (Hardcover)
Speaking as a layman who had practically no knowledge of e-commerce I found the book to be a good introduction to the world of electronic money and of what the future of money will probably be (Personally, I don't like what I see). Along with the history of money, and the development of the Internet, the book contains a lot of detail on the nuts and bolts of the whole complex network; and I don't know how interesting that is to the average person. I read this book not for pleasure, but as research for a paper I am now composing on a related issue. Regarding the topic of virtual money, the author seems to discuss the problems and risks surrounding it rather than give concrete solutions. But neither the publisher nor the author described the work as an "answer book". From what I can see, the write up on the book's dust jacket is an accurate summary of what the book contains.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing, March 1, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Virtual Money: Understanding the Power and Risks of Money's High-Speed Journey into Electronic Space (Hardcover)
This book had a lot of promise.. I was very interested in learning more about the world of Electronic Commerce and how local and global economies are being impacted. This book made a few interesting points, but for the most part was tedious to read, and never got into enough detail on any one subject to be interesting.

I'm still looking for another e-commerce roadmap...

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Vague babble, August 29, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Virtual Money: Understanding the Power and Risks of Money's High-Speed Journey into Electronic Space (Hardcover)
This was a real disappointment. The book is almost unreadable. Terms are defined and then not used properly or are jumbled together--you never can tell what she's talking about. Too many vague generalities. Sentences often make no sense. This book desperately needs an editor. I don't think the author has anything interesting to say about "virtual money," but it's hard to tell. A confusing jumble of babble. Click on to the next book.
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