Some commentators trace the origins of commerce to the very start of transactions in prehistoric times......
Apart
from traditional self-sufficiency, trading became a principal facility
of prehistoric people, who bartered what they had for goods and services
from each other (the barter system was popular in ancient times where
one could get goods and services by offering the other person some other
good and service according to their need instead of paying with
monetary systems, which developed later). Historian Peter Watson and
Ramesh Manickam date the history of long-distance commerce from circa
150,000 years ago.
In historic times, the introduction of
currency as a standardized money facilitated the wider exchange of goods
and services. Numismatists have collections of tokens, which include
coins from some Ancient-World large-scale societies, although initial
usage involved unmarked lumps of precious metal.
The
circulation of a standardized currency provides a method of overcoming
the major disadvantage to commerce through use of a barter system, the
"double coincidence of wants" (which means if someone wants something
from a person, that person should also be in need of a thing or a
service which they can provide), necessary for barter trades to occur.
For
example, if a person who makes pots for a living needs a new house,
he/she may wish to hire someone to build it for him/her. But he/she
cannot make an equivalent number of pots to equal this service done for
him/her, because even if the builder could build the house, the builder
might not want many or any pots. Also, the barter system had a major
drawback in that whatever goods a person get as payment may not
necessarily store for long amounts of time.
For
example: if a person has got dozens of fruits as his payment, he/she
can't store fruit for long or they may rot - which means a person will
have to bear a huge loss. Currency solved this problem by allowing a
society as a whole to assign values[citation needed] and thus to collect
goods and services effectively and to store them for later use, or to
split them among minions.
During
the Middle Ages, commerce developed in Europe through the trading of
luxury goods at trade fairs. Some wealth became converted into movable
wealth or capital.[citation needed] Banking systems developed where
money on account was transferred[by whom?] across national boundaries.
Hand-to-hand markets became a feature of town life, and were regulated
by town authorities.
Today
commerce includes as a subset of itself a complex system of companies
which try to maximize their profits by offering products and services to
the market (which consists both of individuals and groups and other
companies or institutions) at the lowest production cost.
A
system of international trade has helped to develop the world economy;
but, in combination with bilateral or multilateral agreements to lower
tariffs or to achieve free trade, has sometimes harmed third-world
markets for local products.
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