Alternative Digital Currencies Based on Barter
by
Gary North
Tea Party Economist
Recently
by Gary North: Slipping
the Noose: Americans Are Learning How To Resist the Feds Quietly
The free market
responds to demand.
When a government
breaks down, free markets respond. This is happening in Greece.
In a town 200
miles north of Athens, a network of bartering townspeople has sprung
up. No government agency is involved.
No taxes will
be paid.
An unemployed
mother and her daughter are selling jams, vegetables, and liqueurs.
They use a
digital currency called TEM.
In
the network, people can trade their goods and services,
says Christos Papaioannou, one of the networks founders.
If I do a service for you, then you owe me a favour. And
I can use that favour to get some service from someone else. So,
we dont have to exchange directly, I can get it from some
third person.
To be clear,
there is no actual currency or scrip exchanged. Credits are tracked
via an open-source community banking software system called Cyclos.
Katarina, for example, banks her credits from selling jam to buy
staple foods such as eggs and fresh vegetables that are offered
through the network.
This is not
the only such system in Greece. They are everywhere.
I
think that people are becoming increasingly aware, over the past
few years, that financial systems arent sustainable. And
that boom and bust is always going to be with us, despite politicians
continually telling us they are going to work to remove [them],
says Ken Banks, who recently launched a project called Means of
Exchange. The idea behind the project, says Banks, is to create
a toolbox of web-based and mobile apps that will make
it easier for people to engage in things like bartering, swapping
and alternative currencies.
Mr. Banks has
competitors.
This is going
to spread. It will appear whenever governments and banks break down.
When this happens, production will scape the tax collectors
nets. The tax collector cannot track everything. He cannot brig
charges against everyone. The more people who get away with unreported
income, the more difficult it will be for governments to avoid contraction.
The future
will have smaller, weaker governments.
Continue
Reading this relevant BBC article
July
17, 2012
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2012 Gary North
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