The
SBCC Center for Sustainability Presents:
The Future of Money:
Creating Sustainability & Abundance
with Complementary Currencies
with Bernard
Lietaer
Sunday May 6, 2012
6:30-9pm
Fe Bland Auditorium, Santa Barbara City College, West Campus
$10-$5 SBCC Students
"Money is like an iron ring we've put through
our noses. We've forgotten that we designed it, and it is now leading us
around"
Bernard Lietaer
A
ccording to Bernard Lietaer, scarcity doesn't need to be a guiding
principle of our economic system. He also suggests that money
should work for us, not the other way around, and unlike the weather,
wasn't created by Nature, it was created by us!
Monetary systems have existed throughout human history, and with the
centuries-old model that currently exists, has been the culprit for many
of the negative economic and environmental issues we face today.
But what most have forgotten is that money is a human designed
construct that we absolutely have the ability to redesign for a more
abundant and sustainable future.
Join the SBCC Center for Sustainability for a talk with Bernard Lietaer,
author of the newly published book, "New Money for a New
World" on Sunday, May 6, 6:30-9pm, as he discusses
radical but proven ideas about complementary currencies and their ability
to strengthen local communities and their economies, while buffering them
from the ups and downs of the global economy. Using innovative
new systems of exchange, along side existing national currencies,
Lietaer suggests we move away from single currency monocultures, with
their inevitable boom and bust cycles, to multiple and diverse systems of
exchange. When one exchange system goes down, another one is in
place for welcome stability, with a resilience and diversity that mimics
natural ecosystems.
Sharing compelling examples of successful complementary currencies used
around the globe today and those from past eras of history, Lietaer's
ideas are less revolutionary than they appear. Using creative
initiatives such as airline frequent flyer miles (a form of complementary
currency promoting customer-loyalty in exchange for free travel), Time
Banks, commercial barter, carbon currency and mutual credit systems,
communities can empower themselves and flourish in spite of the current
economic crisis, by simply rethinking how money works.
For learning institutions such as colleges that currently leave many
students in enormous debt and others left out of the system altogether,
an exemplary complementary currency model is the Brazilian Saber, where
funds from a small tax on cell phone usage is used to create
"sabers" officially redeemable for teaching other students or
tuition payments, thereby creating a "learning chain and learning
multiplier" effect. The University of Missouri, Kansas City,
introduced an innovative complementary currency called Buckaroos, that
students can earn while performing community service activities.
Bernard Lietaer is a former Belgium banker and the author of several
highly acclaimed books including The Future of Money: Beyond Greed
& Scarcity; and Creating Wealth; Growing Local
Economies with Local Currencies, and his most recent, New
Money for a New World. He has been active in the realm of
money systems in a wide variety of functions for almost 40 years,
including being one of the principle architects of the European
euro. Formerly a professor of international finance at the
University of Louvain, Lietaer was a fellow at the Center for Sustainable
Resources at the University of California, Berkeley. Lietaer
co-founded one of the largest and most successful currency management
firms, GaiaCorp. He is co-founder of ACCESS Foundation, an
educational non-profit organization whose goal is the re-alignment of
sustainability and global financial interests. Business Week
magazine named him "the world's top currency trader" in
1992.
Faye Cox, local currency expert, will introduce and facilitate the talk,
which will include an interesting discussion of how complementary
currencies might be used to address critical social and economic issues
in our region.
The evening talk takes place on Sunday, May 6, 6:30pm-9pm, 2012, at
the Fe Bland Auditorium, Santa Barbara City College West Campus, 721
Cliff Drive, SB, 93109. $10 general/$5 SBCC students. No reservations
required. More info: (805)962-2571, email: sbpcnet@silcom.com,
http://sustainability.sbcc.edu/
Sponsored
by:
The SBCC Center for Sustainability
http://sustainability.sbcc.edu/
Co-sponsors: Santa Barbara Permaculture Network,
Santa Barbara Time Bank, & the Santa Barbara Slow Money
Chapter
Read More:
Bernard Lietaer website:
http://www.lietaer.com/
Santa Barbara TimeBank:
http://santabarbara.timebanks.org/
International Journal of Community Currency Research (IJCCR):
The online forum for disseminating knowledge about community and
complementary currencies around the world.
http://www.ijccr.net/IJCCR/IJCCR_Home.html
Quotes:
- "National currency is cold and selfish by itself. So let's
create community currencies with which we can warm up our communities as
New Money For A New World recommends."
- ~Tsutomu Hotta
- Former Minister of Justice and Supreme Court Judge in Japan
- Chairman, Sawayaka Welfare Foundation
- Founder of the Japanese "Fureai Kippu" currencies
- "Bernard Lietaer and Stephen Belgin compel us to rethink our
assumptions about money, economics, and commerce today. Their analyses
and historical insights are incisive and provoke thought about what's
gone wrong with economies all over the world. But more importantly, they
provide tangible solutionsillustrated in real-world examplesto
challenges we face with building more just, prosperous and sustainable
global societies."
- ~Martin N. Davidson, Ph.D.,
- Associate Professor at Darden Graduate School of Business
- Author of The End of Diversity as We Know It
- "Every so often, something comes along that changes our
perceptions, turning our world upside-down and inside-out. New Money
For A New World will shatter the views of anyone who uses money, and
show how we can make money work for us, creating greater prosperity and
possibility, while bringing balance to our greatest social and
environmental problems."
- ~Nitin Gadia
- Videographer of Creating Our Own Money
- Facilitator of the Central Iowa Currency Initiative
Margie Bushman
Program Coordinator, SBCC Center for Sustainability
http://sustainability.sbcc.edu/
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