Marketplace®

Daily business news and economic stories
Season 2Episode 3Jul 6, 2021

The history of banks

Lending and saving and lollipops, oh my!

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The history of banks
Leigh Luna/Marketplace

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When banks first started thousands of years ago, they were known as places to borrow money, not keep your own money safe.

Through loans, banks provided funding to farmers or traders to help them with a project — like building a fence or traveling to another country. Borrowers would have to leave something valuable with the bank until they paid off the loan. To keep all that valuable stuff safe, banks became supersecure. That made them great places for everyday folks to deposit their own valuables and money.

This week, we’ll learn about the history of banks and how they work today and why they don’t work for all of us. And old friend from Season 1 helps us sort it all out, while Jed and Bridget see if they have what it takes to run their own bank.

Read the transcript here.

A four-panel comic depicting the history of banks: first as money lenders, then as a safe place to store valuables, now as a consumer money management tool. Who knows what the banks of tomorrow might look like?
Leigh Luna/Marketplace
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And now … tips for grown-ups listening to “Million Bazillion” with kids

Money Talks

Take a minute to recap the episode and review the key points. Here are some questions to get the kids going:

  1. What’s the name of the video game Bridget plays with Jed?

  2. Where did some of the earliest known systems of banking start?

  3. What’s the word for the stuff borrowers give a bank to keep in case they can’t pay back a loan?

  4. How do banks make money?

  5. Why do some people not keep their money in banks?

(Scroll to the bottom or click here for the answers!)

Tip Jar

If the kids need a quick refresher on the history of banks and how they work, check out this page.
For a deeper dive, including lesson plans and other teaching resources:

Gimme 5

And now a question for your kids! We want to hear their most fun and creative answer to this question:

If you could design your own money, what would it look like?

Have the kids think it over, and send us a voice memo here

Money Talks answers

  1. Virtual Branch Manager 3

  2. Ancient Mesopotamia

  3. Collateral

  4. By charging interest on loans

  5. Answers will vary, but may include: high fees, lots of rules, unequal treatment, lack of trust

(Click here to scroll back up to the questions)

The Team

Thanks to our sponsors

NGPF

The Ranzetta Family Charitable Fund and Next Gen Personal Finance, supports Marketplace’s work to make younger audiences smarter about the economy. Next Gen Personal Finance is a non-profit that believes all students benefit from having a financial education before they cross the stage at high school graduation.

Greenlight

Greenlight is a debit card and money app for kids and teens. Through the Greenlight app, parents can transfer money, automate allowance, manage chores, set flexible spend controls and invest for their kids’ futures (parents can invest on the platform too!) Kids and teens learn to earn, save, spend wisely, give and invest with parental approval. Our mission is to shine a light on the world of money for families and empower parents to raise financially-smart kids. We aim to create a world where every child grows up to be financially healthy and happy. Today, Greenlight serves 5 million+ parents and kids, helping them learn healthy financial habits, collectively save more than $350 million to-date and invest more than $20 million.

Sy Syms Foundation

The Sy Syms Foundation: Partnering with organizations and people working for a better and more just future since 1985.