The Future of Money
Overview
Money is changing faster than at any point since the collapse of the gold standard. Cash usage is declining across entire regions, central banks are developing digital currencies, stablecoins move trillions of dollars through global networks, and governments are racing to modernize payment systems while preserving monetary sovereignty. Yet beneath the headlines, public debate about the future of money is dominated by speculation, ideology, and technological hype rather than evidence.
In The Future of Money, Bernd Riemann presents a rigorous examination of how the global monetary system actually works today, what measurable forces are already transforming it, and which developments are realistically likely by 2035. Instead of predicting a single financial future, the author analyzes the evolution of money through empirical data, institutional evidence, historical comparison, and observable adoption trends across the world's major economies.
Drawing on research and statistics from central banks, the Bank for International Settlements, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, payment networks, and financial regulators, the book explains the hidden structure beneath modern finance: the relationship between central bank reserves, commercial bank deposits, digital payment infrastructure, stablecoins, tokenized assets, and emerging programmable monetary systems.
The analysis moves beyond simplistic narratives about "cashless societies" or "crypto replacing banks." Sweden's declining use of cash is contrasted with Germany's enduring cash culture. China's mobile payment dominance is examined alongside India's explosive real-time payment infrastructure and Brazil's Pix revolution. The rise of stablecoins is explored not only as a technological phenomenon, but as a reflection of inflation instability, cross-border payment inefficiencies, and the growing convergence between traditional finance and blockchain settlement systems.
The book also confronts the central political questions shaping the next monetary era: Will central bank digital currencies increase financial inclusion or expand financial surveillance? Can private digital currencies coexist with sovereign monetary systems? Will international payments become instant and borderless, or remain constrained by geopolitics and currency competition? Could programmable money fundamentally alter how governments distribute welfare, taxation, or monetary stimulus? And despite decades of predictions, why does cash continue to survive during periods of crisis and uncertainty?
Rather than treating technology as destiny, The Future of Money demonstrates that monetary systems evolve through trust, law, institutional incentives, regulation, and political power as much as through innovation itself. Many of the most important changes underway are occurring beneath the surface of everyday payments, within settlement infrastructure, cross-border liquidity systems, and the architecture of global finance.
Comprehensive yet grounded, analytical yet accessible, this book offers a framework for understanding one of the defining economic transformations of the twenty-first century. It is written for readers who want clarity instead of hype, evidence instead of prophecy, and a realistic understanding of where money is heading in a world increasingly shaped by digital finance, geopolitical fragmentation, and technological acceleration.
The future of money is not a distant theory. It is already unfolding.
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9798197672100
- ISBN-10: 9798197672100
- Publisher: Independently Published
- Publish Date: May 2026
- Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.78 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1.12 pounds
- Page Count: 380
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