Here in southwest Mass. there's a new local currency issued by a nonprofit that's been making a splash with recent stories in the NY Times and on ABC national news. There are 230 businesses accepting BerkShares already, and there are 140,000 in regular circulation.
The purpose of a local currency is to function on a local scale the same way that national currencies have functioned on a national scale -- building the local economy by maximizing circulation of trade within a defined region. They were widely used early in the 1900s, but are now being recognized as a tool for sustainable economic development. The currency distinguishes the local businesses that accept the currency from those that do not, building stronger relationships and a greater affinity between the business community and the citizens of a particular place.
Local currencies are not intended to replace federal currency but to aid the goals of sustainability, as they strengthen the regional economy, favoring locally owned enterprises, local manufacturing, and local jobs, and reducing the region's dependence on the global economy. And they're at work all over the world. See the additional resources section to learn about more such currencies in KS, MI, CA, IN, NY, PA, VT, and more, plus Canada and Mexico.
What might our communities look like if we all were using such a locally responsive currency?
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Kate Sheppard Posted 3:48 am
07 Mar 2007
Kate Sheppard
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Delay And Deny Posted 4:10 am
07 Mar 2007
The best currency in the world would be WalMart Bucks. Globalization and WalMart are making more poor people rich than all the greeners in Vermont.
Sorry folks, but you can't stop progress: because it's good, it's gu-oooo-d.
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mihan Posted 4:38 am
07 Mar 2007
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SMLowry Posted 6:13 am
07 Mar 2007
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spaceshaper Posted 11:00 pm
07 Mar 2007
Doesn't amaze me at all. Folks are rightly dubious about restricted currencies - the very first cooperative groceries were created in 19C England to circumvent the funny money monopolies created by local industry that essentially created conditions of indentured servitude for their workers. Wal-Mart would probably like nothing better than to pay their "associates" with currency that can only be spent in their own stores.
Company store systems imposed by economic might are not exactly the same as a local currency I know, but it's suspiciously close: struggling local businesses in small communities are particularly vulnerable to social pressure to accept more local currency than is good for them. Until your local farmer can pay their mortgage with Hours, Berkshares, or Plenties, seems to me the the best way to support local economies will be to simply buy local products and services - with real money.
And though proponents and organizers will hotly deny it, there is (ahem) a tendency for local currency transactions to go unreported for tax purposes. This I would remind Grist readers is not only illegal, but in the case of sales taxes deprives their local communities of revenue. Hardly a plus for local economic sustainability.
The true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit.
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Erik Hoffner Posted 3:42 am
08 Mar 2007
As for social pressure, there's always pressure on local businesses to do the right thing by the community. From being asked to sponsor softball teams to donating pizzas for PTA meetings to accepting a new form of currency, each biz has to decide for itself what it can and can't do. Local currency acceptance is no different...
Erik
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lindy Posted 4:41 am
08 Mar 2007
The term "blind faith" comes to mind when I come in contact with those who are quick to dismiss anything that challenges the hegemony of the dollar or any national bank debt currency for that matter. Faith because that is all that makes money "real," our own "faith" that others will accept it. "Blind" because we really don't know or understand that which we are faithful to accept that it gets us stuff that we want and it isn't very fairly distributed. And we aren't very aware of how the monetary system serves the purpose of industry and militarism at the expense of healthy community and the enviroment. Money is not too different than religion in that we put "something" where there is in fact no thing--nothing but our own faith, trust and relationship. We have externalized something that arises only from within. Local currencies are at least a step to encouraging people to accept the slightly inconvenient, yet necessary work of learning how to develop healthy inter-dependent economic relationships in our immediate community.
About taxes, i don't get your argument---the same thing is true for cash. Should we get rid of cash? If someone is inclined not to pay their taxes, they're not going to pay their taxes. Don't blame it on the currency.
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SMLowry Posted 9:31 am
08 Mar 2007
Re: rent and necessities. The more a local currency is used, the more likely it will be accepted for rent and other necessities. Everything that's offered within the community currency system is listed in a directory, so all participants know exactly what they can and can't use the money for. As it becomes more trusted and understood, it will expand. Wal-Mart dollars, however, don't cut it.
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spaceshaper Posted 4:05 am
09 Mar 2007
As for the costs: the usual costs of tokenism are likely to apply, i.e. distraction from the real issues and from real solutions, kind of like buying a Prius instead of driving a lot less. Then there is the minor inconvenience of having money in your billfold that can't be used to pay for a cup of coffee in a town thirty miles away. And there is ultimately the risk of currency collapse, with possibly catastrophic effect on vulnerable individuals and businesses who have invested excessively in the system. "Save your Confederate money, boys, the South will rise again." Any currency can collapse, of course, not just local scrips, but as with insurance, the larger the spread, the less the individual exposure.
As several commentators have correctly pointed out, my note about tax reporting applies equally to cash and barter transactions, those other time-honored opportunities for cultural creatives (as well as mobsters) to avoid giving money to The Man. As enhanced opportunities for tax evasion are probably the most significant, though dubious, user benefits to be gained from local currency that I am aware of, I'm just pointing out that such personal benefits are illegal and may actually work to the detriment of the local economy. And while I hate paying through my taxes for guns, bombs and warplanes as much as anyone, I don't see tax evasion as an honorable path to expressing that objection.
The true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit.
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SMLowry Posted 9:23 am
09 Mar 2007
Coming down on local currency because you see it as a tax evasion scheme makes no sense to me. Obviously you would chose not to participate in a local currency if one was available to you. That's your right.
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spaceshaper Posted 5:42 am
10 Mar 2007
And this has got to be a good thing for a sustainable community, right? Not necessarily. The problem lies when false claims are made for the scrip's value, such as that it's a sustainability tool. Local experience as a case in point: my local food coop is a mainspring of the local economy, deeply committed to the sustainability elements of its clearly-written mission statement. A local currency was authored a few years ago by an independent group and the coop of course was one of the first local businesses to sign up. Within a short time the coop found itself holding an accumulated balance of over $100,000 of unsecured local currency which couldn't be used to pay its rent, its taxes, or its non-local suppliers, couldn't be held as a reserve in an interest-bearing bank account, couldn't be used to pay dues to national coop organizations or to regional buying consortia, to guarantee loans from the National Coop Bank to new coops in other states which will in time become anchors of their own local economies, or to send aid to hurricane-ravaged communities on the Gulf of Mexico. Too few customers responded to the appeal to accept it as change, and the coop was taking in more than it could spend. Ethical considerations prevented the coop from pressuring employees and local producers to accept the surplus, and at this point the coop wisely chose to severely restrict the amount of local currency it would accept.
Had the coop continued to take unlimited scrip would it have gone belly up? Almost certainly not. Would it have compromised the coop's pre-existing local sustainability efforts? Probably. As it is the coop is thriving and last year spent nearly $2M with local producers, a number which has been growing steadily as percentage of total purchases over the last five years or so. This is not by accident but in accordance with a predetermined program of local farm support which has clear goals and measurable outcomes, and which offers a demonstrable correlation to the sustainability of the local economy that is conspicuously lacking in the program of the local currency. Tom Philpott and other Grist writers have made an outstanding case for local food supply being treated as the core resource for sustainable local economies, and our farmers cannot pay for seed, equipment, livestock purchases with local currency any more than they can with monopoly money or poker chips; nor does it enable them access to financial markets for needed investment. So long as the scrip proportion of their income stays small they can probably handle it (though ironically they will probably use it at the coop to buy imported non-local goods like coffee, bananas, oranges, and toilet paper) but a growth in local currencies presents a clear peril for small producers whose "voluntary" choices are made in limited local markets.
This post has already gone on way too long so I won't even talk about the inflationary dangers of large amounts of self-minted money in a small community, or the destructive potential for balkanization and fragmentation of intricate networks of adjacent, regional and national local economies if these schemes ever became pervasive. Local currencies are harmless enough as a species of regularized barter of minor peripheral services. Let's just make sure they are not oversold to environmentalists as a spurious path to sustainability.
The true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit.
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SMLowry Posted 7:27 am
10 Mar 2007
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