[Scpg] First International Complementary Currency Summit July 31, 2005 - August 5, 2005 Denver, Colorado, USA
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Mon Jun 20 20:39:53 PDT 2005
Denver, Colorado, USA
First International Complementary Currency Summit
July 31, 2005 - August 5, 2005
The ACCESS Foundation has released the info about its international conference
"BRIDGING THE CHASM:
Bringing Complementary Currencies into the Mainstream"
which will be held in Denver University, Colorado, United States
from Sunday, July 31st to Friday, August 5th,
featuring the following key people from all over the world:
* Edgar Cahn US Time Dollar Institute
* Stephen DeMeulenaere Indonesia Appropriate Economics/Strohalm
* Bernard Lietaer US/Europe ACCESS Foundation
* Michael Linton Canada Open Money/LETS
* Toshiharu Kato Japan Founder Eco-Money, MITI
* Margrit Kennedy Germany MonNetA
* Jean-François Noubel France Angenius Institute
* Henk van Arkel Netherlands Strohalm
The following five subjects will be discussed at the conference.
* Currency design and innovations to address emerging social and economic
needs.
* New and Enabling Technology Advancements
* Complementary Currencies and the Developing World
* Legal and Governance concerns on local and national levels.
* Online and continuing education for community practitioners.
Further information is available at:
http://dev.openmoney.org/tiki-download_file.php?fileId=4
ARTICLE ON COMPLIMENTARY CURRENCY
Implementation of Complementary Currencies
at the Regional Level
http://www.margritkennedy.de/english/articles/index.html
Margrit & Declan Kennedy
MonNetA in Lebensgarten Eco-village, Steyerberg, Germany
Four years ago we asked ourselves, how we could introduce and test a
practical model of a permanent and stable money system, based on a
circulation incentive at a scale that would be relevant.
The local level seemed to be too small. Many of the mutual exchanges or
LETS systems that exist nowadays, prove that people are looking for a way
to create complementary systems. But the transaction costs are usually too
high; that is: the time needed to obtain the desired product or service is
often too long and, therefore, only a fraction of the needed goods and
services can be obtained. One possibility of reducing the disadvantages,
and including more specialized services, is to link the individual exchange
clubs to larger units though a Clearinghouse-Function, i.e. a jointly set
up accounting system. This is presently being introduced and tested in the
Austrian region of Voralberg.
On the national level, e.g. in Germany, we have just given up the Deutsch
Mark and accepted the Euro. This has positive and negative aspects
simultaneously. Positive: because it has put an end to the speculation
between the former European currencies. Negative: as it is more difficult
to react to specific national monetary situations, financial developments
or critical events.
What remains is the regional level. It is here, at least theoretically,
that the amount of commercial exchange that takes place within a region can
be covered by a regional exchange medium and that the regional economic
development can be revitalized through this measure. There are different
conditions, naturally, which will determine how suitable some regions are
for such a solution. In a region where there is a large diversity of
production, the economic autonomy will be greater and in this way it will
be more suitable for this solution, in contrast to a region that is
dominated by a single employer where most people work in one and the same
factory. Regional currencies, by the way, were common in Europe until the
French Revolution in the 19th century. Then national currencies were
introduced mainly in order to concentrate power and control, rather than to
create more efficiency as it often assumed in economic theory.
What is a Region?
At present, there are relatively few studies or data available that can be
used to support the arguments for regional currencies. The Region itself
may be defined with the use of the new currency. Where the region begins
and ends, physically, is dependent on the will of the people using the
complementary currency. No one can be forced to use it. And the readiness
to use it will be determined by socio-economic situation - but also by
commercial, cultural or historical relationships.
Ideally, a complementary regional currency should be introduced parallel to
a labelling of regional products so that goods and services can be
identified as regional products. That would give people a choice in
shopping - especially for products and services from their region - and
thus a further choice in supporting the region in which they live.
Most new jobs are created by small and middle-sized enterprises (SMEs). If
money is put into production and not primarily into moneymaking activities,
new perspectives are opened for regional economic growth through regional
currencies. It seems entirely possible that local service-oriented banks
could offer a regional currency in their product portfolio in co-operation
with the municipalities in their particular region.
The goal is to allow a new practical experience with a stable exchange
medium, designed as a community service rather than a profit-making
commodity. This may be the starting point of a new development. And similar
to the first energy-saving houses that were built in the 1970ies, the new
models may probably not yet be perfect.
Let us take a practical example
From the numerous projects that are presently being implemented and which
will be included in the next book, co-authored by Margrit Kennedy and
Bernard Lietaer, we would like to talk about one example. Having mentioned
the idea of a complementary regional currency system for the first time in
a conference in June 2002 in Steyerberg, Germany, this project was put into
practice within a half year. The first attempt, in creating regional money
as a complementary exchange medium, was initiated in a Steiner School in
Prien in the region of Chiemgau, Bavaria, by the economics teacher
Christian Gelleri (www.Chiemgauer-regional.de).
The Chiemgauer project is a voucher system in which, ideally, all
stakeholders have advantages. Many consumers are members of an
association. In exchanging Euros, they get Vouchers of the same value
but support their association, which gets 3% of the transactions.
The shopkeepers who take the vouchers in payment can redeem them back into
Euros with a slight loss a 5% redemption fee - or they can use them for
paying in another shop, for paying their employees or for paying their
advertisements in the local newspaper. But within three months the
Vouchers, which are subject to a circulation fee, return to the issuing
agency which receives the two percent difference between the redemption fee
of 5% for the shopkeepers and the bonus of 3% for the association for its work.
In addition, customers accept a circulation incentive a fee of 8% per
annum. Every three months (4 times a year), a 2% stamp has to be bought and
stuck on to the voucher otherwise the voucher does not retain its full
value. This somewhat clumsy system can be later simplified by use of
electronic payment functions.
The Chiemgauer consumer chooses a charitable organization or project to
which the 3% bonus fee will be paid. In this manner, the buyer of this new
exchange medium - at first: the parents of the Steiner School children -
supported the new extension of the school. In the meantime, many other
non-profit projects are on a list and now the members come from all over
the region.
Most of the shopkeepers see the complementary currency system as a customer
loyalty programme (similar to airline bonus-miles, with which a person can
pay for a room in a hotel or for many other commodities and services). The
voucher system, actually, is not really creating a new currency, but using
the possibility of giving the customer loyalty or bonus systems - an
additional function. Through the statutes of an association the members
have defined a framework of how and where the vouchers can be used.
Nowadays, in Germany, anything up to 10% of their income is being used for
customer loyalty. Therefore, the support of the regional currency does not
bring more costs for the shopkeepers. As the people can pay with this
regional exchange medium, they come back to that particular shop. As
retailers experience that they can pay others with this medium of exchange,
the Steiner school students coming back to the shops (at the end of each
month) to exchange the Regional Vouchers i.e. the Chiemgauers for Euros,
hear that there are no vouchers in the cash box, because the shop keepers
have passed them on. The participating businesses in Chiemgau have
increased their turnover.
The effect for the customers is pretty clear they pay with vouchers,
where they possibly can, before using Euros. And that is what a regional
currency is all about. In Australia, a similar scheme showed that while 70%
of the SABC vouchers were exchanged back into Australian Dollars in the
first year, in the third year, it was only 7%. The vouchers were being used
as a complementary currency and the cost of redemption had worked like a
demurrage or circulation fee.
The cost of administrating the vouchers is covered by the income difference
between the 3% bonus and the 5% redemption fee. Any surplus from the
circulation fee goes to the specified projects in the region. Those who use
the regional exchange medium are ready to accept a small loss (if they hold
on to it in their pockets as cash), because they have the advantage that
they can support their choice of projects, associations or events.
One advantage of the voucher system is that the consumer only exchanges
Euros into the regional-vouchers for what is needed or can be spent. This
also works as a safety measure that not too many vouchers will be issued.
Otherwise, this might cause an inflation of vouchers, if the issuing
association is not careful.
This safety feature of Voucher Currencies does not exist in the so-called
Fiat-Currencies which can be created practically out of nothing. This was
the way in which the DM was introduced in 1945. Each person was paid a flat
sum of DM 40, - which started the German Economic Boom. Likewise, one
could imagine, for instance, that a regional currency could start by
paying out a relatively small sum of regional currency per head of the
population. This may create legal problems nowadays; and the danger of
unlimited expansion of the amount of money issued. In the Argentine after
the national currency crash in Dec 2001, for instance -- many complementary
currencies all over the country helped two million people to survive for
some months. Later, inflation - printing too many notes - and forgery were
the reasons for the collapse of this otherwise very effective medium of
exchange.
The following three reasons may help to explain why this idea in Germany
- has been taken up so quickly and been put in practice:
- Firstly, there seems to be many aspects that speak for a revitalisation
of regional economy and identity, balancing the unilateral tendency towards
globalisation. This applies to the marketing of fresh food in the region as
well as to the use of regenerative energies or improving bio-regional
water, sewerage and waste disposal systems;
- Secondly, many individuals and groups are searching nowadays for a
practical way to overcome the present economic and unemployment crisis;
- Thirdly, there are very few legal possibilities to create a regional
exchange medium that simultaneously offers advantages to all concerned
and, therefore, has the chance of being accepted by a wider population base.
Further Development
In the last two years, a group of Economics Professors from Austria,
Germany and Switzerland have formulated a new report for the Club of
Rome. The title is Wie wir wirtschaften werden (How we will develop our
economies). It has been published in September 2003 and fills a gap that
was left by the first Report of the Club of Rome The Limits of Growth that
started the sustainability debate about 30 years ago. The Meadows and their
co-authors left out the subject of money, as they saw money as a passive
accounting system that had neither negative nor positive influence on the
question of sustainability. The new report refutes this thesis and
identifies the introduction of complementary local and regional currency
systems as an important part of sustainable development.
This indicates a new openness in the scientific and political realm and is
the basis for our further work which aims at:
implementing regional currencies in the regions in a professional manner
yet also as a community service, i.e. on a non-profit basis;
structuring the governance of regional currencies in such a way that they
can be democratically controlled and lead to linking unmet needs and
underutilized resources in the region;
analysing the experience of the concept of regional currency in a few
regions before too much enthusiasm creates too many mistakes and gives the
opponents enough arguments to blast the concept before it has been tried out.
Resources:
Web sites:
www.MonNetA.org
www.stable-money.com
www.geldreform.de
Books:
Margrit Kennedy,
Interest and Inflation Free Money Creating an exchange medium that works
for everybody and protects the earth
Seva International, Okemos, Michigan, USA, 1995
Changing the Money System (als pdf, 570kb)
Bernard Lietaer,
The Future of Money
Random House, London, 2000
Stephan Brunnhuber & Harald Klimata,
Wie wir wirtschaften werden Szenarien und Gestaltungsmoeglichkeiten fuer
zukunftsfaehige Finanzmaerkte
Ueberreuther, Frankfurt am Main, 2003
Margrit Kennedy & Bernard Lietaer,
Regional-Währungen Neue Wege zu nachhaltigem Wohlstand
Riemann - One Earth Spirit, Munich, 2004
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Interest & Inflation Free Money
Creating an exchange medium that works for everybody and protects the earth
By Margrit Kennedy
English expanded and revised Edition, 1995
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