The English word 'commodity' entered the language around 1440 from Old French 'commodité' (convenience, advantage, profit), from Latin 'commoditās' (fitness, convenience, suitable measure), from the adjective 'commodus' (suitable, fitting, convenient, proper). Latin 'commodus' is composed of 'com-' (together, with, in a suitable way) and 'modus' (measure, manner, way, limit), from PIE *med- (to measure, to take appropriate measures). A commodity is, at its etymological root, something that is 'of suitable measure' — something fitting, appropriate, useful.
The Latin root 'modus' is one of the most important in the European vocabulary of thought and commerce. From it derive 'mode' (a way or manner), 'model' (a measured pattern), 'moderate' (keeping to the measure), 'modest' (keeping within limits), 'modify' (to change the measure), 'modern' (from 'modernus,' of the present measure or time), 'mood' (in its grammatical sense, from 'modus'), and 'modular' (built in measured units). The concept of measure — proportion, fitness, the right amount — runs through all these words and connects them to 'commodity,' which originally meant a thing that is rightly measured to human needs.
The English word initially meant simply a useful or advantageous thing. Shakespeare uses 'commodity' in this general sense in 'King John,' where the Bastard denounces 'commodity' (self-interested advantage) as the corrupting force in politics. By the sixteenth century, however, the word was narrowing toward its commercial meaning: a product, particularly a raw or semi-processed material, that can be bought and sold. Wool, grain, salt, timber, metals — these were the original 'commodities' of English trade.
The modern economic definition of a commodity is more precise: a basic good that is interchangeable with other goods of the same type. A barrel of crude oil is a commodity because any barrel of the same grade is functionally identical to any other. A bushel of wheat is a commodity for the same reason. This interchangeability — or 'fungibility,' from Latin 'fungi' (to perform, to serve in place of) — is what distinguishes commodities from differentiated products. A smartphone is not a commodity because brands and models differ significantly; copper wire
Commodity trading has ancient roots. The earliest known commodity exchanges date to Sumeria around 4500 BCE, where clay tokens representing quantities of goods were traded. The Amsterdam Stock Exchange, founded in 1602, formalized commodity trading in the modern sense. The Chicago Board of Trade, established in 1848, created the system of standardized commodity futures contracts that remains the foundation of global commodity markets. In each case, the key innovation was the same: abstracting
The phrase 'commodity market' describes the exchange where raw materials are traded. 'Commodity futures' are contracts to buy or sell a commodity at a predetermined price at a future date — a mechanism for managing price risk. 'Commodity prices' are among the most closely watched economic indicators, since they affect the cost of everything from food to fuel to construction. The 'commodity supercycle' — a long-term pattern of rising and falling
The Marxist use of 'commodity' adds a layer of theoretical meaning. In Marx's analysis, a commodity is any product of labor that is produced for exchange rather than for direct use. Marx distinguished between a commodity's 'use value' (its practical utility) and its 'exchange value' (what it can be traded for), and argued that capitalism transforms human labor itself into a commodity — 'labor power' that is bought and sold on the market. 'Commodity fetishism' describes the process by which social relationships between people are perceived as economic relationships between things. This theoretical framework has made 'commodity' a loaded term in political and cultural analysis.
In everyday English, 'commodity' is increasingly used metaphorically. Time is treated as a commodity. Attention is a commodity. Data is a commodity. In each case, the word implies that something has been standardized, quantified, and made available for exchange — reduced to a tradeable unit. The metaphor carries an implicit critique: to call something a 'commodity' suggests that it has been stripped of its uniqueness and individuality, turned into just another interchangeable unit in a market.