Fleeing Vesuvius. Gillian Fallon

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Fleeing Vesuvius - Gillian Fallon

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      GRAHAM BARNES

      No currency will work unless people accept it from each other so this novel money will be put into circulation as a way of rewarding those who are accepting and spending it most.

      Around the world, conventional currencies such as the euro, the dollar and the pound are in short supply because of the current economic crisis. A liquidity network (LQN) is designed to ease this shortage by creating and distributing a supplementary debt-free currency so that businesses and individuals can trade locally without needing the conventional sort.

      Money essentially performs three functions: it acts as a means of exchange, as a store of value and as a unit of account. A liquidity network aims to fulfil only the first of these. It would enable people to buy and sell goods and services in a specific geographic area. The generic name for an LQN’s electronic currency is the quid but each local system will probably give a special name to its own version. For example, the emerging Kilkenny LQN group has named their unit the Katz after a very successful local hurling team, the Cats.

      As quid can be spent only inside the local area, a healthy quid supply will boost local trade. If euros become scarcer and scarcer, the relative importance of an LQN will increase. Quid will free up euros for “out-of-area” transactions and places with an LQN will become more competitive than those without.

      Imagine if a million euros went into circulation in your town overnight but they were super-euros — euros that could be spent only in your area and which spawned extra super-euros in your account if you spent them quickly. A much higher level of trading would take place as the new currency passed rapidly from person to person and from business to business. This super-euro is the quid.

      Liquidity Network Structures and Design

      Each LQN will be run by a local organization within a framework and guidelines set down by a national support organization to which they all belong. An important function of both the local and the national organizations is that they recognize and reward Positive Behavior — behavior considered to be beneficial to the specific LQN or to the acceptance and success of the LQN movement in general.

      The key aspects of the LQN design are:

      • Accounts are not allowed to go into the red. Transactions are processed instantly and because there is no debt, there is no need for credit checks nor a legal process for debt recovery.

      • Quid are given rather than lent into circulation, the only condition being an expectation of (defined) Positive Behavior by the recipient.

      • Some Positive Behaviors — for example, spending one’s quid quickly after one gets them or dealing with an increasing number of people — are rewarded after the event.

      • If someone fails to maintain a trading level for which they have been rewarded, the quid they were given can be gradually withdrawn. This is to ensure that the supply of quid can be reduced to maintain its value if the overall level of trading falls.

      • All trading is carried out electronically by mobile phone or over the internet. This enables the LQN to calculate rewards or account reductions. There is no paper currency.

      The LQN design team also have strong preferences:

      1. for Open Source software development and Open Hardware 2. for organizational structures recognizing the advantages of the Viable Systems Model and sociocratic approaches

      3. for the development of publicly visible Trading Reputations based on Positive Behaviors, as a means of building mutual trust among LQN users

      The detailed design of each LQN will be developed with local LQN partners and local circumstances may dictate specific tactical decisions. The team’s preferences above should be seen in that context.

      Wherever the LQN concept is discussed, people are excited by it. The challenge now is to design and implement strategies that will create the critical mass of earning and spending required for a successful LQN. The Feasta group is concentrating on two particular approaches:

      i) A local authority–backed LQN: The LQN would give the local authority a specific amount of currency, for example 1 million quid, to spend into circulation by paying a portion of its staff salaries with them. In return, the council would agree to carry on accepting quid, at par with the euro, in payment of local rates, rents and service charges until it had either earned-out its advance in performance rewards or had returned any unearned advance to the LQN. We are currently discussing this arrangement with councils in Dundalk, Kilkenny and Ennis.

      ii) The “TradeTrust” route: A trade exchange network using euros is set up with the support of the local Chamber of Commerce. This network has all the features of an LQN, i.e. instant electronic transactions and no credit, except that the transactions are in euros, so users have to provide (or be provided with) a euro float. Once the exchange is running, the trading levels provide a good guide to the amount of quid that each account needs to provide the liquidity for the amount of trading it is doing. The appropriate quid amounts can then be issued and the euros withdrawn. A group in Cork intends to follow this route.

      The Drawbacks of Free Money

      The fact that in both of the above cases quid are given into circulation is one of the obstacles facing an LQN, as the idea that money can be “given away” encourages the thought that quid are of no value. In addition, there is an initial worry that there is no way to sanction participants who retire from the scheme immediately after spending the quid they have been given. But then the penny drops and the worriers realize that all the quid already spent are in other accounts and will be spent again and again and again around the local network.

      Once an LQN is operating on a reasonable scale, fear of losing trade to rivals will be a key factor in encouraging traders to stay in the network and others to join. Getting people to join in the start-up phase may be more difficult. It is becoming more obvious that we need to appeal to both intrinsic and extrinsic motivations. We have been somewhat surprised recently to notice that while our own motivations for developing LQN are largely intrinsic, we have assumed that we needed exclusively extrinsic (economic) motivations to encourage participation. But does an LQN project grounded squarely in a distrust and dissatisfaction with mainstream economics really need to couch its propositions solely in terms of economic benefit?

      For traders the advantages of joining — their extrinsic motivations — are administrative efficiencies:

      • instant transactions with no credit. If insufficient funds are in place the transaction doesn’t happen.

      • simplified electronic transactions with well-designed user interfaces.

      • low transaction costs (compared to banks) and maintenance fees.

      • and being on the inside track of a new growing local marketplace, such as that offered by the members’ directory section of the LQN website.

      However, we are beginning to suspect that intrinsic motivations — support for one’s local community, local activism vs. national “sitting on hands,” building trust via transparent transaction behavior — may be as or more important than extrinsic ones and that LQNs should harness these feelings in their marketing messages.

      Rewarding Positive Behavior

      A progressive and proactive local council will want to be seen as a driving force at the heart of an LQN initiative that embodies the social cohesion needed for competitive modern localities. To earn their

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