.

Showing posts with label Economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economy. Show all posts

12/6/08

Local Currency in Milwaukee


It looks as if some of E. F. Schumacher's ideas have begun to grow legs in Milwaukee. The Riverwest and Eastside communities have begun to entertain the possibility of establishing local currency, and they've been getting a fair share of local and national media attention for it too. Newsweek, the Chicago Tribune, and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, have each ran articles about it. A local radio station, WTMJ (am620), a local television news station, TMJ4, and a radio station in Baltimore, WBAL (am1090), have also provided coverage of the story. The issue has made an appearance in a number of blogs as well. (cf. The Consumerist)

So far, nearly every news piece that I've read, watched, or listened to, has implicated the current financial crisis as the reason for Riverwest's rising interest in local currency. Consider the opening lines of the Newsweek and Chicago Tribune articles, respectively:

People nationwide may start hoarding their cash as recession fears grow. But in Riverwest—a progressive enclave of Milwaukee—residents have another answer to their money trouble: they'll print their own. The proposed River Currency would be used like cash at local businesses, keeping the area economy humming whatever the health of the country at large. "We can create our own value," explains Sura Faraj, 48, one of the plan's organizers. (Newsweek)

Residents from the Milwaukee neighborhoods of Riverwest and East Side are scheduled to meet Wednesday to discuss printing their own money. The idea is that the local cash could be used at neighborhood stores and businesses, thus encouraging local spending. The result, supporters hope, would be a bustling local economy, even as the rest of the nation deals with a recession. (Chicago Tribune)

The way I see it is that the explanation offered by Newsweek, the Chicago Tribune, et alia is due to the presumption of a logic of economic centralization; rural and certain urban localities, with the labor and resources they provide, are essentially seen to act as tributaries that feed a steady stream of goods and services into larger, central markets, which themselves feed back into their tributaries, as if forming a loop. The presumption is that, so long as the central markets continue to grow, overall wealth should increase for its tributaries as well. Likewise, when larger markets falter, one should expect the same for local communities. Given the logic of centralization and given that the adoption of local currency entails at least a mitigated rejection of centralization, it isn't difficult to imagine that the only type of scenario in which a community would consider adopting local currency would be one in which the central markets fall on hard times. In all other cases, adopting local currency would amount to biting the hand that feeds, which is irrational so long as the hand keeps feeding. However, the current economic crisis must have scared some into believing that sometime soon the hand might actually stop feeding, so naturally these folks have begun to look for another means of sustenance.


Monopoly money? Think twice!


What is one to make of this explanation? Well, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article is exceptional in that it depicts Riverwest's interest in local currency as arising from a broader concern for building a stronger, more eco-friendly community. One of its quotes is from a post on Sura Faraj's blog, in which she discusses the various benefits of localizing currency. Faraj is a politically outspoken member of the Riverwest community, and apparently her blog has served as a catalyst for Riverwest's flirtation with developing a local currency. Here's a bit about what she has to say:

Most community currency is based on time and can be used to exchange services in neighborhoods. This promotes local economic strength and community self-reliance. Other benefits include more community involvement and pride, patronage of local businesses (those that participate), and ultimately the reduction of traffic emissions. Because of its positive impact on the environment, local currencies are part of economic strategies of more and more sustainable living supporters. (Sura for Change)

Taking this into account, one can see why a community would want to adopt local currency no matter how well or poorly the larger markets may be doing. By encouraging local productivity and widespread ownership, allotting more control to the community and its members, and providing a counter-balance to national and international businesses who have no qualms with funneling wealth out of local communities, local currency would guarantee more freedom, in the sense that the community becomes less dependent on external financial and economic institutions to meet its needs.

Creative Commons License
Local Currency in Milwaukee by Nathan M. Blackerby is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.


11/10/08

Speculation and Anticipation Rule the Day


It was a spectacle to witness the collective euphoria that ensued last week after Barack Obama defeated John McCain in the presidential race. Moments after the polls closed on the west coast and, one by one, every major news network projected Obama the winner, I listened from my apartment in Milwaukee as each corner of the city simultaneously burst into jubilant celebration. I stayed up until early Wednesday morning and watched ABC News broadcast live feeds of parties as they took place in the streets of DC, Harlem, Los Angeles, and Times Square. The following day, it was as if the students on campus here at Marquette University were walking on air. Most of my friends and family members could barely contain themselves, whether in conversation, e-mail, or in the updates and comments posted to their social networking site(s) of choice. Barack Obama became the first minority ever to be elected US president, the first black person to occupy the highest office in the land. His campaign motivated young people and minorities to be politically active in ways the nation hasn't seen since the 1960's. His victory signaled an end to eight years of far-right rule under George W. Bush. There was and still is much to celebrate. However, the gravity of the difficulties our nation now faces demanded anything but prolonged celebration.

By Thursday, it was back to business as usual, and speculation about what an Obama administration would look like soon ran rampant throughout the media and the Internet. Obama announced Rahm Emanuel as his chief of staff, and planned a meeting with his economic advisers. Pro-Palestinians and those seeking a peaceful, two-state solution to the Arab-Israel conflict claimed that Emanuel would be a rabid dog in foreign policy matters, constantly whispering pro-Israeli sentiments in Obama's ear, which they claimed if acted on, would only serve to escalate the violence. By contrast, many Zionists were at least apprehensive that Obama might turn his back on Israel. On Sunday morning, I watched the local and national political television shows as many Republicans continued to label Obama The Most Liberal Member of the US Senate, a charge constantly leveled against him throughout the the presidential campaign. Yet, commentators on well known liberal news shows such as Democracy Now! claimed just the opposite; Obama is, and will remain, a conservative, they said. Now that's a headspinner! How can one man simultaneously occupy mutually exclusive positions in the political spectrum?

Obama won the election for a number of reasons, but mainly, I think, because of his message of change: reformation of health care, development of so-called green energy, a return to a more progressive taxation system, a definite plan to end our military operatives in Iraq and Afghanistan, more transparency in politics, a break from the divisive politics of the past 28 years, etc. Many now wait in anticipation, anxious to see an Obama administration implement those changes he claimed he would bring to America. Some are blinded by their optimism that he will unquestionably deliver on his promises. Others, as mentioned above, have defaulted to the same tired old divisions, seeing only compromise and failure in his future. I suppose its natural after such a grandiose historical event to whip out one's crystal ball and dream about what the future holds. Yet merely because such dreaming is natural, this doesn't count in favor of its accuracy. Right now, speculation and anticipation rule the day, when what we sorely need is some patience, keen observation, and a readiness to speak up when things begin to go awry.

Creative Commons License
Speculation and Anticipation Rule the Day by Nathan M. Blackerby is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.