“…objects produced exclusively for sale) and money as the universal equivalent of all commodities in societies manifesting the capitalist mode of production. At the same time, it argues ‘that money results from a historical process, in which each of the components of value, as it exists fully fledged in capitalism, comes into being one at a time’ (Campbell, 2004: 74). Second, while trade and money emerged where independent societies came in contact, the circulation of goods within autonomous pre-capitalist communities was shaped by the social relations of production and reproduction that prevailed in them – sharing, customary reciprocal obligations, redistribution, or exploitation.…”