euys’s concept of money can be clearly understood, in outline, through his blackboard sketches. What strikes one most forcefully in these drawings is his depiction of the circulation of money, above which is written ‘Check this again after five years!’
The blackboard is divided by a horizontal line into the production side (‘Prod. Seite’) and the consumption side (‘Rons.’). This in itself signals an important polarity. On the production side, Beuys has written ‘Capital = skills’. People’s skills form the capital of a national economy. As such, economic activity is restricted only by the limitations in people’s skills. Money, when issued for useful production, can be created in an unrestricted manner. This process of creating money currently takes place in the central banks of all modern societies. Money issued for productive purposes by the independent initiative of central banks flows into business enterprises. From there, it is distributed to workers as income. At the bottom of the page Beuys remarks ‘Separation of work and income.’ By this he means that the distribution of income is a fundamental process of rights and should by no means be dealt with as an economic process. Products can be assessed according to economic viewpoints. Work, however, belongs to the rights area, which invokes human dignity. The circuit is interrupted by a clearly marked threshold (Schwelle) (top/centre). This threshold indicates the market (capital M). Here the goods produced meet the consumer and money is exchanged. The consumer uses and eliminates the goods, or in other words they disappear from the economic circuit. The money used as payment flows back to the entrepreneur but it has lost all connection with the value of the goods. Beuys, therefore, writes ‘Money in reflux without value connection’ (top left). Yet, today, this ‘value-less’ money is often used to represent claims to ownership of the means of production, sunk into land ownership, etc. Beuys makes it clear that this money has an accounting consequence but no real relationship with value