Inevitably different disciplines approach the topic of money from different perspectives. The political economist Karl Polanyi defined money in the broader sense as a semantic system, in the way that language or weights and measures might be thought of, or in a narrower sense as the items used for ‘payment, standard, hoarding and exchange’.4 Freud compared money with faeces, saying children are initially interested in playing with their waste products before they move onto mud, then stones and eventually money. The nineteenth-century philosopher and psychologist William James considered money to be part of our extended self. ‘Our self,’ he says, ‘is all that a man’ – and he did just refer to men – ‘can call theirs which includes your body, your psychic powers, your clothes, house, wife and children, ancestors, friends, lands, horses, yacht and bank account.’5
The key psychological feature of the idea of money for me is trust. The historian Yuval Noah Harari calls money the ‘most universal and most efficient system of mutual trust ever devised’.6 Money provides us with an abstract way of freezing trust. To stay safe and to prosper we need to co-operate with each other. This is easy if you know someone well, but co-operation with strangers requires a means of quantifying and exchanging that trust. This is what money can provide. No wonder that no society that has begun to use money has reverted to doing without.7 But this is not a book about the history of money. It is a book about what money does to us today, how it changes our thinking, our feelings and our behaviour, and how when it’s scarce, it can have even more of a hold over us.
We constantly make assumptions: that big bonuses encourage chief executives to try harder, that we can bribe our children to do their homework, or that faced with a set of deals we know exactly how to choose the one that is the best value. But as I’ll show, the evidence demonstrates that we’re not always right. Along the way we’ll meet the people who find thinking about money eases their fear of death, the man who gambled away more than four million pounds, and the people of Tamil Nadu who freeze when faced with life-changing amounts of cash.
Once you’ve finished this book, I trust you’ll think there’s a better response to the problems of money than burning £50 notes or escaping to your own Typee. That instead of feeling you’re controlled by money you control it. In other words you will have achieved Mind Over Money.
1
FROM CRADLE TO GRAVE
Where our relationship with money starts, why money is both a drug and a tool, why we hate to see money destroyed and how it wards off our fear of death
If you are like me and enjoy the occasional bar of chocolate or the odd glass of wine, every time you indulge, your neurological reward system responds. A pathway is activated in your brain. You experience a spike of dopamine. Which gives you pleasure. Do it again, your brain seems to be saying. Do it again and you’ll get another reward.
It’s easy to see how parts of your brain might become active in these circumstances. A chemical and neurological chain reaction takes place. Yet the same thing has been shown to happen when people are given money.1 In one study winning money and having tasty apple juice squirted into the mouth produced similar responses in the brain.2 And the reward doesn’t even have to be a coin or banknote as long as it represents money. When neuroscientists put people in a brain scanner and gave them vouchers as prizes when they won in a quiz, the brain’s limbic system released dopamine.3
Dopamine is all about immediate reward rather than delayed gratification. And what’s remarkable here of course is that there’s no direct link between consumption and reward. Money and vouchers are promissory. They promise you can do something in the future. Okay, you could rush down to the corner shop to buy wine or chocolate (maybe even with the vouchers) but the gratification still isn’t instant.
Money is acting like a drug, not chemically but psychologically. Money hasn’t existed for long enough in evolutionary terms for humans to develop a specific neural system to deal with it. So it seems as though a system usually associated with immediate rewards has been co-opted to deal with money. Sometimes neuroscientific studies can feel as though they simply reflect in the brain what we already know to be true from our experiences. Here neuroscience can tell us something more curious.
For a promise of money – someone merely saying they’re going to give you money but not handing over notes or a voucher – doesn’t have the same effect. When this happens, different regions of the brain are activated. We don’t view the prospect of money in the same way as actual money (or even vouchers), despite the fact that the latter can’t be spent immediately either.
So it appears we desire money for its own sake. It’s a kind of drug. Of course money isn’t physically addictive as such, but as I’ll show in Chapter 2, we’re all drawn, to varying degrees, to the thing itself.
Yet, at the same time, we desire money because it helps us to accomplish what we want in life. In other words, money is a tool: a way of getting the things we want.
Psychological research on our attitudes to money has tended to concentrate either on money as a drug or as a tool. But the British psychologists Stephen Lea and Paul Webley surely echo common sense in suggesting it’s both. Sometimes money seems to control us – money over mind; sometimes we are able to use money in the way we want – mind over money.
But of course it’s more complex than that too. Money affects our attitudes, our feelings and our behaviour. And these three dimensions interlink, merge and decouple in fascinating and downright strange ways.
Yet to complicate things even further, when money is destroyed our brains revert to seeing simply it as a tool.
Time to think back to that night on Jura, when the K Foundation burnt a million pounds. What was it that upset people so much about the destruction of cash?
In 2011, the husband-and-wife cognitive neuroscientists Chris and Uta Frith conducted a study that might shed some light on it.4 They slowly reversed prone volunteers into a brain scanner, where a mirror angled at 45° allowed them to watch a series of short videos on a screen. Each film lasted 6.5 seconds and every one featured the same woman wearing a black jumper and sitting at a shiny white table.
The people watching the video never saw the woman’s face, but they could see her torso and also her hands, which held a banknote. Sometimes the banknote was real, but worth a lot (the Danish krone equivalent of £60); sometimes it was real but worth a lot less (the equivalent of £12); and sometimes it was the same shape and size as a banknote, but featured scrambled-up pictures (making it obvious that the note was worthless).
As the people lying in scanners watched, the woman held up one of the notes, slowly moved her fingers to the centre of the top of the note and then ripped it very deliberately – from top to bottom. The reactions were what one might expect. When the woman was tearing up the obviously fake notes, people were fine about it. But when real money was destroyed they responded to a questionnaire saying they felt uncomfortable, particularly with the higher denominations.
In many countries, it’s illegal to deface or destroy money. In Australia, such action lays you open to a fine of up to A$5,000 or a two-year prison sentence.5 These were punishments that some felt the prime minister of the country should have faced back in 1992. Paul Keating was visiting the Townsville Oceanarium in North Queensland when a local artist asked him to autograph two A$5 banknotes. He did so, was filmed in the act and a storm of outrage followed.