mercredi 1 avril 2026

Money: Theory, History, and Contemporary Perspectives

Auteur : Djibril Chimère DIAW
Publié pour la première fois le 31 Janvier 2026

PDF : https://archive.org/details/@xamxamsoft






Money: Theory, History, and Contemporary Perspectives

Djibril Chimère DIAW

Copyright



Money: Theory, History, and Contemporary Perspectives

Copyright © 2026 Djibril Chimère DIAW

All rights reserved



Dedication



To

my mother Marème Fall

my father Amadou Chimère Diaw

my wife Isabelle Diaw

my children

Fatou-Chimère Diaw, Ahmadou-Chimère Diaw,

Marième-Chimère Diaw, Aïssata-Chimère Diaw .



my grandparents

Fatou Methiour Ndiaye & Waly Sega Fall

Fatou Faye & Souleymane Chimère Diaw



Teachers



To those who shall come into the world a century after me, beginning in the year two thousand and seventy-two.





To all mothers,
to those who made our coming into the world possible through the gift of themselves,
to those who, even today, carry, give birth to, nourish, protect, and raise life,
to those who, tomorrow, will continue to open the path of human existence.

To all women who, in silence or in light, have risked their bodies, their strength, and sometimes their lives so that humanity may endure.
To their quiet courage, their daily resilience, and their founding love.

May this work stand as an act of recognition,
a tribute passed on from generation to generation,
and a word of gratitude addressed to those without whom nothing would have been, nothing is, and nothing will be.



Editorial Preface

Money occupies a singular place in the history of human societies. At once a technical instrument, an institutional construction, and a total social fact, it traverses disciplines_economics, sociology, history, political science, and law_without ever being reducible to a single definition. The contemporary transformations of the global monetary system, marked by increased financialization, the dematerialization of means of payment, and the emergence of new forms of digital currencies, make a rigorous, structured, and transversal reflection on the very nature of money indispensable.

This work is situated within this perspective. Its purpose is to offer a coherent and in-depth analysis of money by articulating its theoretical foundations, its economic functions, its historical forms, and its contemporary challenges. The ambition is not merely descriptive, but analytical: to understand money as a central institution of economic coordination and as a vector of power, trust, and sovereignty.

This contribution is intended for researchers, advanced students, policymakers, and readers concerned with grasping monetary dynamics beyond strictly technical approaches. It seeks to provide a solid conceptual framework while remaining attentive to empirical realities and to the specific challenges faced by contemporary economies.

General Introduction

Money constitutes one of the fundamental pillars of any organized economy. Without it, exchanges would be hindered, productive specialization would be limited, and social coordination would be profoundly altered. Yet, despite its omnipresence, money remains a complex theoretical object, often misunderstood, oscillating between an assumed neutrality and a decisive centrality in economic dynamics.

Long regarded by certain schools of thought as a mere veil over real exchanges, money is now recognized as a structuring element of modern economies. It influences saving and investment behavior, conditions access to credit, shapes relations between states, and partly determines the trajectory of economic development.

This study aims to analyze money from an integrated academic perspective. After clarifying its conceptual foundations, it examines its essential functions, its modes of creation and regulation, as well as the macroeconomic and geopolitical issues associated with it. Particular attention is devoted to recent transformations, notably digitization and the questioning of traditional monetary frameworks.

An In-Depth Analysis of Money

I. Theoretical Foundations and Definition of Money

From an economic standpoint, money can be defined as any asset that is generally accepted for settling transactions, valuing prices, and extinguishing obligations. This acceptance relies less on the intrinsic properties of the monetary object than on a social convention stabilized by institutions.

Theoretical approaches diverge as to the fundamental nature of money. Metallist theories emphasize intrinsic value and scarcity, while chartalist and institutionalist approaches stress the role of the state, taxation, and legal constraint in the recognition of money. Modern theories, for their part, emphasize money as a social relation of debt and credit.

II. The Economic Functions of Money

Money traditionally fulfills three fundamental functions.

As a unit of account, it provides a common standard that makes it possible to express prices and compare heterogeneous values. This function is indispensable to economic rationality and to the accounting of economic agents.

As a medium of exchange, money facilitates the circulation of goods and services by eliminating the constraints of barter. It enables the expansion of markets and productive specialization.

Finally, as a store of value, money allows the transfer of purchasing power over time. This function depends closely on monetary stability and on the credibility of issuing institutions.

To these functions is added that of a means of deferred payment, which is essential in economies based on credit and intertemporal commitments.

III. Historical Forms and the Evolution of Monetary Systems

Monetary history reveals a progressive evolution of the forms of money, closely linked to economic and social transformations. Commodity monies gradually gave way to metallic monies, and later to fiduciary monies, based on trust rather than intrinsic value.

In contemporary economies, scriptural money, created by the banking system, constitutes the dominant share of the money supply. Technological innovations have also fostered the emergence of electronic money and dematerialized payment instruments, profoundly transforming monetary practices.

IV. Money Creation and the Role of Central Banks

Modern money creation is based primarily on bank credit. When a bank grants a loan, it simultaneously creates a deposit, thereby increasing the money supply. This mechanism is framed by prudential regulation and by the action of central banks.

Central banks perform essential functions: issuance of fiduciary money, conduct of monetary policy, supervision of the financial system, and preservation of price stability. Their institutional independence aims to guarantee the credibility of money and to limit inflationary excesses.

V. Macroeconomic and Geopolitical Issues of Money

Money lies at the heart of macroeconomic equilibria. Excessive inflation undermines confidence and penalizes savings, while persistent deflation can restrain investment and economic activity. Monetary policy seeks to arbitrate between these risks in a context of structural uncertainty.

At the international level, money constitutes an instrument of power. Reserve currencies, exchange rate regimes, and capital flows shape relations of dependence and monetary sovereignty, particularly for the economies of Africa south of the Sahara, which face external constraints and limited policy space.

Transversal Conclusion

The analysis of money reveals a profoundly multidimensional reality. Far from being a simple neutral tool, money is a central institution, at the crossroads of economic, political, and social spheres. It organizes exchanges, structures expectations, and reflects relations of power within societies and between them.

Contemporary transformations, marked by digitization and financial innovation, do not call into question the fundamental functions of money, but they redefine their modalities of exercise and their institutional frameworks. In this context, a rigorous understanding of monetary mechanisms appears more necessary than ever.

Ultimately, to think about money is to question the very foundations of the economic and social order. Any reflection on development, sovereignty, or macroeconomic stability cannot dispense with an in-depth analysis of this essential institution.


lundi 9 mars 2026

Temporal Doctrine of Dynamic Capital Allocation A formalization derived from a real case observed and validated by facts



Auteur : Djibril Chimère DIAW
Publié pour la première fois le 07 Février 2026

PDF : https://archive.org/details/@xamxamsoft

Temporal Doctrine of Dynamic Capital Allocation

A formalization derived from a real case observed and validated by facts

Djibril Chimère DIAW

Copyright



Temporal Doctrine of Dynamic Capital Allocation : A formalization derived from a real case observed and validated by facts

Copyright © 2026 Djibril Chimère DIAW

All rights reserved



Dedication



To

my mother Marème Fall

my father Amadou Chimère Diaw

my wife Isabelle Diaw

my children

Fatou-Chimère Diaw, Ahmadou-Chimère Diaw,

Marième-Chimère Diaw, Aïssata-Chimère Diaw .



my grandparents

Fatou Methiour Ndiaye & Waly Sega Fall

Fatou Faye & Souleymane Chimère Diaw



Teachers



To those who shall come into the world a century after me, beginning in the year two thousand and seventy-two.



To all mothers,
to those who made our coming into the world possible through the gift of themselves,
to those who, even today, carry, give birth to, nourish, protect, and raise life,
to those who, tomorrow, will continue to open the path of human existence.

To all women who, in silence or in light, have risked their bodies, their strength, and sometimes their lives so that humanity may endure.
To their quiet courage, their daily resilience, and their founding love.

May this work stand as an act of recognition,
a tribute passed on from generation to generation,
and a word of gratitude addressed to those without whom nothing would have been, nothing is, and nothing will be.







Temporal Doctrine of Dynamic Capital Allocation

A formalization derived from a real case observed and validated by facts

Editorial Preface

Contemporary financial markets are too often analyzed through static categories: value versus growth, short term versus long term, speculation versus investment. These oppositions, inherited from a partially outdated theoretical framework, struggle to account for the reality of an environment dominated by volatility, systemic correlation, and the acceleration of information flows.

This text proposes a consciously methodological break. It is neither an ideological manifesto nor a mere market chronicle, but the progressive formalization of a time-based allocation doctrine. This doctrine does not stem from an abstract a priori reasoning: it emerges from a real case, observed under market conditions, confronted with data, and then empirically validated.

The editorial ambition is twofold:
– to offer a rigorous conceptual framework to an intuition often diffuse among practitioners,
– to transform this intuition into a transferable, reproducible, and critiquable tool.



General Introduction

In any investment decision, three variables are traditionally mobilized: expected return, assumed risk, and holding horizon. Yet a fourth variable, more discreet but decisive, remains largely under-theorized: the time necessary to realize the return.

The case studied here highlights a simple yet profound reality: two assets can offer an identical final return (for example, a doubling of price) while differing radically in the time required to achieve this goal. In a universe where capital can be redeployed, this time possesses its own economic value.

The central hypothesis is as follows:
For equivalent final return, the asset that frees capital the fastest is rationally superior, as it maximizes the optional value of capital.

This hypothesis, long implicit in certain trading practices, is here elevated to the status of a structuring principle of a dynamic allocation doctrine.



I. Conceptual Framework: Time as a Value Factor

In classical financial theory, time primarily appears through discounting (net present value) or opportunity cost. However, these approaches assume capital is immobilized until maturity. They become insufficient once capital is mobile, i.e., capable of being reallocated after an intermediate gain is realized.

We introduce here the notion of speed of value creation, defined as the ratio between the return obtained and the time required to obtain it. With constant final return, this speed is strictly inverse to time. It therefore becomes an autonomous selection criterion.



II. Presentation of the Observed Real Case

The case analyzed occurs in the context of a strong correction in the crypto-asset market, followed by a marked technical rebound. Several categories of assets are observed simultaneously:

  • the underlying asset (Bitcoin),

  • a structurally correlated asset (a treasury company heavily exposed to Bitcoin),

  • peripheral assets with high volatility (mining companies).

All these assets share directional correlation but exhibit different elasticities to movements of the underlying. During the rebound, some peripheral assets register, in a few sessions, variations equivalent to or greater than those that structural assets take several months to achieve.

This temporal differential constitutes the central empirical fact.



III. Formalization of the Doctrine

From observation, the doctrine can be structured into three levels:

  1. Principle of Temporal Dominance
    Asset A dominates Asset B in the short term if, for a comparable final return, the time required for A to realize its return is shorter than that of B.

  2. Principle of Rational Rotation
    The temporal superiority of an asset is transitory. Once the high-convexity phase is consumed, capital must be transferred to more stable assets, better suited to the next cycle phase.

  3. Principle of Cyclical Hierarchy
    Assets are not inherently good or bad; they are more or less suitable for a given market phase. The doctrine does not rank assets, but moments.

IV. Empirical Validation

The observed facts successively confirm:

  • the higher speed of value creation of peripheral assets during the rebound,

  • the subsequent stabilization of structural assets,

  • the relevance of a strategy using the former as capital accelerators and the latter as value reservoirs.

The concordance between anticipation, observation, and realization constitutes the empirical validation of the doctrine.



Transversal Conclusion

The doctrine presented does not claim to abolish risk or predict markets. It proposes a shift in perspective: moving the center of gravity of investment decision-making from mere return to the time of return.

Derived from a real case and tested by facts, this approach offers a unifying framework for reading market behaviors during stress, rebound, and stabilization phases. It allows one to move beyond the sterile opposition between trading and investment by placing them on a temporal continuum.

Ultimately, this doctrine reminds us of a frequently overlooked truth:
In finance, capital is valued not only by what it earns, but by the speed at which it becomes free to earn again.

It is in this temporal freedom, rather than in the exclusive pursuit of maximal return, that the deep rationality of dynamic capital allocation lies.


mardi 13 juillet 2010

Management stratégique

Management stratégique

Cours 

Management stratégique J.-A Heraud Université Louis Pasteur 2005-2006 . PDF

Qu'est-ce que le management stratégique ?  par Florence Allard-Poesi Université Paris XII . PDF

Management stratégique. Dynamique des marchés par Tom Koplyay et Jean-Paul Paquin 2002 . PDF

Management Stratégique. Appariement stratégique par Tom Koplyay et Jean-Paul Paquin 2002 . PDF




Gestion de projet

Gestion de projet

Cours 

Éléments de gestion de projet par A. Beugnard ENST Bretagne . PDF

Gestion de projet par Denis Szalkowski . PDF

Fondamentaux de la gestion de projet par Rémi Bachelet École Centrale de Lille . PDF

Outils de gestion de projets par Rémi Bachelet École Centrale de Lille . PDF

Conduite de projet par N. Bertin Boussu ESC1 2005 . PDF

Management de projet par Marc Lassagne ENS Cachan . PDF

Cours : gestion de projet par A. Perruchoud HES 2006 . PDF

Planification Participative et Gestion du Cycle de Projet Le Manuel par Jochen Lohmeier COMIT Dakar , Sénégal 1997 . PDF

Gestion de projets - Coûts délais par T. Fricheteau 2007 . PDF

Management et gestion de projet 2007/2008 . PDF

Gestion de portefeuille de projets CIGREF . PDF

Guide de gestion de projets Frank Heyworth CELV. PDF




lundi 12 juillet 2010

Stratégie d' entreprise

Stratégie d' entreprise

Cours 

Stratégie d' entreprise par Thierry Weil École des mines de Paris 2008 . PDF

Qu'est-ce que la stratégie d'entreprise ? par Stéphane Saussier IAE Paris . PDF

Stratégie d' entreprise : évolution de la pensée par Maurice Saïas et Emmanuel Métais . PDF

Stratégies d'entreprise : nouvelles contraintes et nouveaux enjeux strategie.gouv.fr . PDF

Mondialisation et nouvelle stratégie d'entreprise par J.-H. Lorenzi . PDF




dimanche 11 juillet 2010

Théories des organisations

Théories des organisations

Cours

Les théories des organisations par Gérard Charreaux et J.P. Pitol-Belin . PDF

La naissance de la théorie de l'organisation et du management par L. Karsten . PDF

Introduction à la théorie des organisations par François Pichault . PDF

Introduction théorie des organisations par C. V. Fourboul . PDF

Théorie des organisations par C. Mansencal et D. Michel Académie de Versailles . PDF

Théorie des organisations par J.-A. Heraud 2008-2009 . PDF

La théorie des organisations et la question de l'anarchie organisée par Ehrard Friedberg CNRS .PDF

Connexionnisme et théorie des organisations par Christophe Assens . PDF




Management

Management 

Cours

cours de management de projet par Didier Lebouc Université Joseph Fourier Grenoble . PDF

Cours Système de management intégré par Christian Virmaux . PDF

Management de projets : Fondamentaux de la gestion de projet par Rémi Bachelet École centrale de Lille . PDF

Management Stratégique par Michel Marchesnay ADREG 2004 . PDF




samedi 10 juillet 2010

Econométrie

Économétrie

Cours

Économétrie par Gérard Grellet 2003 . PDF

Économétrie de la finance par Arthur Charpentier Université Rennes 1 . PDF

Économétrie par Olivier Donni . PDF

Introduction à l'économétrie par O. Torrés Université de Lille 3 2009. PDF

Économétrie NormaleSup 2003 . PDF

Économétrie par Hélène Hamisultane PDF

Économétrie approfondie par Michel Beine Université Libre de Bruxelles . PDF

Économétrie appliquée par Martine Heloir . PDF

Résumé du cours d'économétrie par Yves Tillé 2008. PDF




Microéconomie

Microéconomie

Cours 

Cours de microéconomie par Christelle Dumas . PDF

Microéconomie Notes de cours par M. D. Henriet ENSAE 2004-2005 . PDF

Introduction à la microéconomie A. Chassagnon . PDF

Notes de cours micro-économie en 2ème année du DEUG par Nicolas Gravel Université de la Méditerranée 2003 . PDF

Microéconomie par Desquilbet . PDF

Microéconomie : décision en univers risqué par Yann Braouezec ESILV . PDF

Analyse microéconomique . PDF




vendredi 9 juillet 2010

Macroéconomie

Macroéconomie

Cours

Macroéconomie Notes de cours Université Panthéon-Assas Paris 2 Licence AES 1 ère année 1er semestre Année universitaire 2004-2005 par Etienne Lehmann et Sébastien Lotz .PDF

Initiation à la Macroéconomie Licence 1 Économie Gestion Université d' Orléans par Rémi Bazillier .PDF

Macroéconomie Notes de cours David de la Croix . PDF

Cours de Macroéconomie Première année Sciences économiques et de gestion Institut Supérieur de Gestion de Tunis par Khemakhem Jamel . PDF

Cours de Macroéconomie financière ENSAE 2005 par Alexis Direr . PDF

Macroéconomie de l'emploi et du chômage Elisabeth Cudeville Maître de conférences .PDF 


Macroéconomie Avancée Xavier Ragot ENS . PDF



Economie générale

Économie générale

Cours

Cours Économie générale INSEA . PDF


Économie générale Initiation Année scolaire 2009-2010 École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées par Stephane Gallon . PDF


Économie générale Les théories économiques Les principaux courants de la pensée économique IUFM Auvergne par Mr Diemer . PDF

Économie générale Capitalisme , Marché et État IUFM Auvergne par Mr Diemer . PDF

Économie générale BTS Première année Biales Leurien et Rivaud . PDF



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