One of the strangest ideas of our time is the tendency to oppose money to human values.
As if pursuing financial independence were somehow morally questionable, while dependence on a group were a virtue.
Yet throughout most of human history, poverty has never made people freer.
It has made them dependent.
Dependent on their family.
Dependent on their clan.
Dependent on their community.
Dependent on a lord.
Dependent on the state.
Real freedom begins when an individual owns something of their own and can exchange it freely.
That is precisely what money makes possible.
Contrary to a popular belief, money is not merely a tool for accumulation. It is, above all, a tool for independence.
When I have money, I do not need to ask for a favor.
I do not need to belong to a particular group.
I do not need the approval of a community.
I can exchange with anyone.
Barter and systems based on personal obligations work differently. They generally require an ongoing relationship between individuals. Each person remains indebted, socially or materially, to the other. The exchange is never truly complete.
Money changed that.
It transformed relationships of dependence into relationships of choice.
This is one of the reasons modern societies were able to move beyond the limits of tribes, clans, and closed communities.
Money allows people to cooperate without belonging.
It allows people to work together without thinking alike.
It allows people to create value without asking permission.
Many contemporary narratives place the common good above individual interest.
Yet a simple question is rarely asked:
Why encourage someone to dedicate their time and energy to a collective cause before they have achieved their own independence?
A dependent individual remains dependent, even when serving a noble cause.
A free individual can choose which causes deserve their support.
The distinction matters.
Freedom is not the absence of money.
Freedom is the ability to make choices without constantly relying on the will, approval, or resources of others.
And historically, few human inventions have contributed more to that freedom than money and private property.
Money is not the opposite of human dignity.
For many people, it is one of the conditions that makes dignity possible.
References
This reflection belongs to the classical liberal tradition developed by John Locke (Second Treatise of Government), Adam Smith (The Wealth of Nations), Friedrich Hayek (The Road to Serfdom, The Constitution of Liberty), and Milton Friedman (Capitalism and Freedom).
The distinction between communal dependence and cooperation among strangers draws particularly from Hayek’s work on spontaneous order and from Karl Popper’s analysis in The Open Society and Its Enemies.
Finally, the tension between security and freedom echoes an ancient theme found in Aesop‘s fable The Dog and the Wolf, which contrasts comfortable dependence with difficult freedom.