"Time is money"
About this Quote
Time is money is Franklin doing what he did best: laundering moral instruction through practical advice, making virtue sound like a savvy deal. On the surface it is a brisk proverb about productivity. Underneath, it is a cultural pivot. Franklin isn’t just warning you not to waste your afternoon; he is recoding time as a measurable asset, something that can be invested, squandered, or compounded. That framing is the engine of modern capitalism, and Franklin sells it in five words.
The specific intent is disciplinary. It targets the small leakages of the day - idleness, delay, distraction - and turns them into a ledger problem. If your hours have a price, then procrastination becomes a kind of theft, not from your boss, but from your future self. The subtext is also about credibility in a commercial society: punctuality and industriousness aren’t merely private virtues; they are signals of trustworthiness in a world built on credit, contracts, and reputation.
Context matters: Franklin wrote in a rising Atlantic economy where merchants, artisans, and printers (his own milieu) depended on deadlines, cash flow, and networks. The proverb flatters the new middle-class ideal of self-making: you don’t need inherited land or titles if you can convert your own attention into value. It’s also a quiet political statement. In a republic suspicious of aristocratic leisure, urgency becomes ethics. Franklin’s genius is that he makes that ideology feel like common sense, not propaganda.
The specific intent is disciplinary. It targets the small leakages of the day - idleness, delay, distraction - and turns them into a ledger problem. If your hours have a price, then procrastination becomes a kind of theft, not from your boss, but from your future self. The subtext is also about credibility in a commercial society: punctuality and industriousness aren’t merely private virtues; they are signals of trustworthiness in a world built on credit, contracts, and reputation.
Context matters: Franklin wrote in a rising Atlantic economy where merchants, artisans, and printers (his own milieu) depended on deadlines, cash flow, and networks. The proverb flatters the new middle-class ideal of self-making: you don’t need inherited land or titles if you can convert your own attention into value. It’s also a quiet political statement. In a republic suspicious of aristocratic leisure, urgency becomes ethics. Franklin’s genius is that he makes that ideology feel like common sense, not propaganda.
Quote Details
| Topic | Time |
|---|---|
| Source | Benjamin Franklin, 'Advice to a Young Tradesman, Written by an Old One', 1748 (contains the line 'Remember that Time is Money'). |
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