Showing posts with label gift economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gift economy. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2009

time banks



There's been several Hour Currency's the past few decades, perhaps most referenced in america, is Ithaca HOURS. Ithaca HOURs popped up during the early 90s recession (ie, during economically stressed times), and was implemented as a closed and anonymous paper currency.

Time Banks are not all implemented this way. A more modern medium is to do this via the web. Time Banks offers online software to help communities keep track of the hours they share together. As with all other currency efforts i've seen, it's richly steeped in a value system that believes in social equality (note the social justice jargon all over the place on their website).

Interestingly, because their is no monetary value placed on these exchanges, the IRS does not tax transactions. It's placed more in the category of gift economy. perhaps it's a bit of a grey area, as it's a tightly reciprocal gift economy (different than the pay-forward true giving value system of currencies like the giving coins i've blogged about).

I quite like these value systems these groups put forth, though i question their effacy in getting larger economic circles involved in trade with these mediums. Most business and economic spheres are steeped in a division of labor culture that values hours unequally, based on perceived value to the buyer, and what the market price is (ie, the value to the buyer is always higher than the price in the market place, which does sound a bit unfair, doesn’t it?). also, it's a bit hard to measure other forms of capital (like goods) as "labor capital". while it intellectually makes sense, it even makes my own brain hurt a little bit to overload labor with capital. I can see why these social justice people believe there's a conspiracy against labor when power (ie capital) is defined as something that it's not.

anyhow, this floating exchange rate between people's exchangeable hours makes me think about the exchange rates between multiple community currencies and possible private business scripts. I struggle a bit with the loose lexicon of this subject. Changes in community exchange rates (with dollars or other currencies) would basically result in community pay raises or pay cuts (when they are selling their labor/goods), and community buying power increases or decreases (whey they are buying from outside their community system.

This power sharing story already plays out geopolitically between nation-states. I can hear the time hour community railing against the economic injustice of whole groups of people trapped in a currency that relegates their whole nation to sweatshop activity. I cant really blame them for going to the opposite extreme of equality for all. A noble effort, though would need some innovation to bring it out of the fringe.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Love Economy Coins


Money can be based on something as lovely as love.   Consider:
www.thegivingcoin.org

from they're website:
Inviting Trust, Connection, and Playfullness, this Program is sure to create exciting innovative ways of "Paying it Forward".  Each Flyer will then be Given a Coin, and asked to do something Magical and Creative for another Human Being... Something that reminds them that this Reality is indeed Magical as well...  Give Love, and Pass it On..

This is quite an interesting basis for a currency.  Gift economies are often implicit reciprocal agreements that the giver is expected to get something in return.  A binding of the receiver into an informal debt.  Gift economies can be quite lovely, and not necessarily of the God Father, "I will do this for you today,  but remember, one day, and that day may never come, I will call upon you todo some service for me." variety.

But these coins are intended to be given without any strings attached.  They are perhaps the loveliest coins i've seen.

Love,
Ken

Monday, April 20, 2009

twitter dollars


twitter dollars are at the opposite end of the spectrum of managing national currencies to resolve geo-political tensions and relations:


The Twollars idea was conceived by Internet entrepreneurs Eiso Kant and Mac
Taylor. They noticed that there was an enormous amount of 'social energy' on
Twitter that goes unmeasured. They realised that if this energy could be
converted into a symbolic standard, it could then be passed around like a
currency.


monetizing social relations gets dicey-er the closer to home one gets. transactionallized prostitution is illegal, but sex is institutionalized (for example, a marriage contract isnt valid until the relationship has been consummated). This wizardly desire to transmute value from one thing to another, and make it liquid has been the long trend of financial innovations over the past several thousand years. Drawing the boundaries of where one stops using precise mechanisms to relate is an open sociological and political question.

One trouble many have with transactionallizing relationships is that the contract of relationship ends once the payment is made, whereas a gift economy gives a psychic bond that strengthens (for better or worse) the relationship.

paypal, gift economies, and upstart community currencies all experiment with the boundaries of where the marketplace ends and where the social "economy" begins. what an interesting question of selling your soul to the devil. or to your wife.