On the small island of Yap in the Pacific Ocean, people use stones as money. Some of these stones are very big — bigger than a person. They are too heavy to carry. So when someone buys something with a Rai stone, the stone does not move. It stays where it is. Everyone in the village simply remembers that the stone now belongs to a different person. There is even a famous Rai stone that fell into the sea many years ago. People still use it to trade, even though no one alive has ever seen it. This object can teach us a surprising thing: money does not have to be coins or paper. Money is really an agreement between people. As long as everyone trusts the record of who owns what, almost anything can be money. This idea connects Rai stones to bank accounts, to mobile money, and even to Bitcoin.
All three are money — or have been used as money. The note is just paper; it has value because the government and the people agree it does. The gold coin has value because gold is rare and people want it. The Rai stone has value because the community remembers who owns it. The surprising point is that the note and the Rai stone work in the same way: both depend on people agreeing. The gold coin is the odd one out — its value comes partly from the metal itself. This shows students that 'money' is not one simple thing.
This is the key question of the lesson. If the record is gone, ownership becomes unclear — unless the people remember. The Rai stone system worked because the whole community remembered together. No single person held the record. This is very similar to how Bitcoin works today: many computers all keep the same record, so no one person can change it. It is also similar to how a bank works — except the bank is the only one keeping the record, which means we all have to trust the bank. Rai stones, Bitcoin, and bank accounts are all answers to the same question: how do we agree on who owns what?
At first this sounds very strange. But it is exactly what happens with money in a bank. When you have £100 in your bank account, the bank does not have your £100 in a small box with your name on it. The money is just a number on a computer. If you trust the bank, the number is real money. If everyone stopped trusting the bank, the number would mean nothing. The Rai stone at the bottom of the sea is the same idea, hundreds of years older. Both work because of shared belief, not because of a physical object.
Rai stones show that money is really an agreement between people. The stones do not need to move when ownership changes — the community simply remembers. This same idea is at the heart of modern money: bank accounts, mobile money, and digital currencies all work because people trust a shared record. Rai stones help students see that 'money' is not one thing but many — and that trust is the most important part of any money system.
| Feature | Rai stones | Money today |
|---|---|---|
| What is it made of? | Limestone | Paper, metal, or just numbers on a computer |
| Does it move when you spend it? | No — it stays where it is | Sometimes (cash) — but often no (bank transfer, mobile money) |
| Who keeps the record? | The whole community, by memory | Banks, governments, or many computers (Bitcoin) |
| Why does it have value? | People agree it does | People agree it does |
| What if no one trusts the record? | The money stops working | The money stops working |
Rai stones were a simple, primitive form of money used by people who did not understand 'real' money.
Rai stones used the same idea as modern banking — a shared record of ownership. In some ways the Rai system was more advanced than coins, because it did not need a central authority.
It is easy to think that older or non-Western systems were less developed. In fact, the Rai system was a clever solution to the problem of how to record ownership without writing.
Money has value because it is made of something valuable, like gold or silver.
Most money in the world today has value only because people agree it does. A £10 note costs almost nothing to make. Its value comes from trust and agreement, not from the paper.
Students often think money used to be 'real' (gold) and is now 'fake' (paper). In fact, money has almost always depended on agreement and trust, not just on the material.
The Rai stone system stopped working long ago and is just history.
Rai stones are still part of life on Yap today. They are used for important ceremonies, gifts, and big agreements, even alongside modern money.
Many lessons present non-Western traditions as belonging only to the past. This is not true and gives students the wrong picture of the world.
Yap is a real place and Yapese culture is alive today. Do not call Rai stones 'primitive' or 'old-fashioned'. Treat them as a clever and living system, not as a museum piece. Rai stones are still important in Yapese life — they are used for marriages, big gifts, and community agreements. The lesson should help students respect the Yapese system, not feel sorry for it.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about Rai stones.
Why do Rai stones not need to move when someone buys something with them?
How is a Rai stone at the bottom of the sea similar to money in a modern bank account?
Give one reason why someone might say Rai stones are a clever system.
What would happen to Rai stones if the people of Yap stopped trusting each other's memory?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk about them in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas.
If you had to invent a new kind of money for your community, what would you use? Why?
Is mobile money more like a Rai stone or more like a coin? Why?
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