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  • Published: 11 June 2026
  • ISBN: 9781804950630
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

Money: The Inside Story

The Surprising Truth About How Money Works




Most of us think about money every day. But how many of us know how it actually works?

Every morning, someone unassumingly types numbers into a spreadsheet, hits enter and creates millions of pounds. Somewhere deep underground, a machine most of us will never see props up the entire British economy. And hidden in a vault nearby are individual banknotes worth £100 million each. These are just some of the surprising truths about how money works.

The Bank of England know more about the money system than most – after all, it is their job to keep it running smoothly. Now, for the first time, two of its economists take you deep into their vaults to tell you the inside story of money.

They explain how ordinary banks are able to create money from scratch, and what stops that descending into chaos. They explore what causes inflation and why one country tried to solve rising prices by asking its citizens to cut all banknotes in half. They uncover how a baby hippo briefly became a global currency, and what that says about the future of money. And they reveal what goes on inside the Bank of England during a banking crisis, and why it means your money is safer now than ever before.

Along the way, they explore how money is changing today – and what new technologies like crypto mean for its future. The result is a lively and surprising guide to how money is supposed to work, what happens when it doesn’t, and where it might be going next.

  • Published: 11 June 2026
  • ISBN: 9781804950630
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

About the authors

Rupal Patel

Rupal Patel and Jack Leslie are economists at the Bank of England and work as advisers to the committee who set interest rates. Rupal spends most of her time thinking about inflation and now and then writes books about economics. Jack is focused on understanding the UK economy, which means charts, spreadsheets, and more charts.

Jack Leslie

Rupal Patel and Jack Leslie are economists at the Bank of England and work as advisers to the committee who set interest rates. Rupal spends most of her time thinking about inflation and now and then writes books about economics. Jack is focused on understanding the UK economy, which means charts, spreadsheets, and more charts.

The Bank of England

Rupal Patel and Jack Leslie are economists at the Bank of England and work as advisers to the committee who set interest rates. Rupal spends most of her time thinking about inflation and now and then writes books about economics. Jack is focused on understanding the UK economy, which means charts, spreadsheets, and more charts. Founded in 1694, the Bank of England is the UK's central bank, responsible for setting interest rates, running the country’s payments system and regu­lating the financial sector – or in other words, making sure that money works. Over the last decade, the Bank's staff have been on a mission to get outside the City of London and promote economic literacy across the UK: whether by delivering talks in schools, running Citizens' Panels on people's eco­nomic experiences, or publishing the bestselling primer on economics Can’t We Just Print More Money?.
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