The Swiss Solution by Bernard Lietaer, April 2009 issue, Ode Magazine
A new form of currency could help us in economic crisis. How a complementary currency helped save Switzerland from economic ruin in the 1940’s and could do the same for us today.
The travails of the banking crisis have been front-page news for months, and the biggest bailout inhuman history is underway. However, the real economy—the one in which businesses manufacture and sell goods and a service—is turning out to be the next victim. Whatever governments do for the banks, credit will be a lot harder for businesses to obtain for many years to come.
The trickiest part of the situation is the simultaneous nature of the crisis. When one bank—or an entire country’s bank—gets into serious trouble, healthy companies can find credit from other banks or countries. But when the meltdown happens across the global financial system, another dynamic comes into play. The world economy predictably veers toward a simultaneous recession, which in turn worsens the banks’ balance sheets, motivating financiers to reduce credit further. When all banks cut back on their loan portfolios simultaneously, it deepens the hole being collectively dug for the world economy.
Under these circumstances, businesses can take two strategies: they can try to get help form governments when their individual problems become unmanageable, or take the initiative to save themselves cooperatively. The first option isn’t new. But governments the world over have just bled themselves dry to save the banking system. So depending on them to save important businesses could resemble waiting for Godot. Therefore, the second option is clearly better, and there is a very successful precedent even if it is surprisingly little-known.
Once upon a time, during a crisis similar to today’s, 16 business people got together to see how they could help themselves. They or their clients had received a notice from their banks that their credit lines were going to be reduced or eliminated. Bankruptcy was only a matter of time. They realized that business A needed a loan to buy goods from business B, which in turn needed money to pay its suppliers. So they decided to create a mutual credit system among themselves, including their clients and suppliers. They created their own currency, identical in value to the national money—with the interesting feature that these funds didn’t bear interest. A debt in this currency would be reimbursed with sales to a participant in the network or settled in national money. This system saved many of the businesses involved.
A cooperative was set up among the users to keep the accounts dealing with this currency. Soon, participants could also borrow in that currency from the cooperative at the remarkable low interest rate of 1 to 1.5 percent. These loans needed collateral, exactly as in a conventional bank. Over time, the system grew to include one-quarter of all businesses in the country. The secret of the nation’s legendary economic stability was that strange little unofficial currency.
Whenever there was a recession, the volume in the currency grew significantly, thereby reducing the negative impact on sales and employment. Whenever there was a boom, business in national currency expanded, while activity in the alternative currency dropped again. The spontaneous counter-cyclical behavior of this little system helped the central bank of the country stabilize the economy.
This isn’t a fairy tale, but a true story of the WIR system (WIR, an abbreviation for Wirtschaftsring, “economic circle.” Also means “we” in German”. The country in Switzerland and the 16 founders met in Zurich in 1034. Within a year, some 3,000 participants were benefiting. And the system still works; the annual volume of WIR business is about $2 billion.
I propose businesses create such systems at whatever scale makes sense. This approach will prevent or reduce the strangulation of the real economy by the credit contradiction. It will avoid duplicating the worst of the 1930’s: massive bankruptcies, intolerably high unemployment and untold suffering. Such a system, scaled to make a real difference, can be set up in a fraction of the time it took in the 1930’s.
Time is of the essence, if we want to avoid the social and economic ravages unleashed by the unraveling of today’s complex business supply chains. As the rot spreads from the banking system to non-financial businesses, a lot of damage will be done quickly. We shouldn’t wait to act until supplier or clients are in trouble. Why wait to grab a candle until it is too dark to find one?
Why should we be any less entrepreneurial than the Swiss in 1934?
*Bernard Lietaer (lietaer.com) is a Belgian economist and author of 14 book, including The Future of Money.
This article is reposted from the pages of Ode Magazine.
Converse
A repost from : http://www.odemagazine.com/doc/
1Is this the same as the local or complimentary currencies that are being used in some communities in the U.S.?
2In essence you are talking about a "barter" system economy. Very difficult to make work, and requires A LOT of trust.
3Our gov't hasn't come up with anything which would not simply be tossing more money into a large black hole. A recognized bartering system would be a solution that each company would be able to control by either choosing to either do a portion or all its interation with providers and so forth. This would empower businesses to assist each other while managing to stay afloat AND more importantly acquire less actual debt.
I suppose that I feel that instead of whining and demanding someone to bail them out this would empower a business to find a way to be dependant on themselves and their ability to be intuitive and use that ingenuity we as Americans feel is so much a part of our culture.
Why do we have to use a tired and ineffective way to save our businesses?
We are a nation of free thinkers----we need to put our thinking caps on instead of pointing fingers and whining.
4Some communities do use local currencies - some have for a couple of years now - so obviously it can be done. I can't imagine bartering or using local currency for anything I do right now (I just don't buy much) but if it started in my community, I'd definitely look into it.
5I've never heard of local currencies, can you name some communities that use it so I can look into it more?
6Haus, this looks like the best organized example:
7http://www.berkshares.org/
It sounds like a good idea, but you have to buy them with regular money so I don't really see how its different than the money we use now. Its a neat concept though and I like that the businesses that accept them and use them make a commmitment to buy local first.
8Jct: Best of all, when the local currency is pegged to the Time Standard of Money (how many dollars/hour child labor) Hours earned locally can be intertraded with other timebanks globally!
9In 1999, I paid for 39/40 nights in Europe with an IOU for a night back in Canada worth 5 Hours.
U.N. Millennium Declaration UNILETS Resolution C6 to governments is for a time-based currency to restructure the global financial architecture.
See my banking systems engineering analysis at http://youtube.com/kingofthepaupers
I look at this concept as trading. An example, my father owns a small company (downsized severely due to the downturn) which specializes in stairs and fireplace mantels. They deal with vendors for stair parts that also deal with builders for other goods. If they all reached an agreement that a certain amount of materials would be "credited" as they change hands and pass from one to another it would leave actual capital free to pay other things such as employees. Another consideration is the bonds which are demanded for all three of these entities required by lenders, this is an enormous amount of money to be spent on a "bond" that rarely comes into play and would be unnecessary if they did not have to deal with lenders.
All three of these entities have already come up with an agreement which does not hold another company liable if one is sued for reasons that are rooted in service. Prior to this if a builder was sued by a new home owner about windows, that lawsuit was extended to every single vendor that had a hand in building that house whether or not they had anything to do with a window. This was a huge burden on small companies having to retain attorneys to represent them in actions which had nothing to do with the actual complaint...a window.
Small busnesses are often held in a catch 20...banks decided to cut all funds to them first and chose to support the larger buinesses instead. What they didn't realize was that without the small business owner buying the goods from the larger, this larger company simply has had to sit on goods that nobody can get funds to buy, meanwhile the little guy goes out of business as he cannot get goods nor can he make payroll. The large vendors had equity sitting in storerooms which nobody can afford to buy, by passing goods to one another they have managed to stay afloat although alot of damage was done before they came up with this agreement.
These types of agreement are excellent when dealing with a cyclic business model, where on provides a service or object to another until it come full circle. It is this ingenuity which will help our corporations become reponsible. If we toss money at them they will never look at how they do business and become smarter about how they accomplish their goal.
An example for the auto industry: Exchanging vehicles inexhange for parts in order to keep parts coming in. Any company providing parts for the auto companies would probably love to have new vehicles...imagine using a vehicle instead of giving some other sort of perk. Another possibility could be giving employees stock as part of payment. While you cannot pay bills with stock, it does give an employee a feeling of being part of that company, and would strenghten their reserve in possibly letting go of all those unions while are now weakeningthe industry and costing many jobs. It is an action which establishes "What is in this for me?" perhaps will change into "Hey this is my company too...let's make prudent decisions to save all our butts." WHat if they simply gave each employee a new car. One time deal--if they let go of the unions.
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