British city goes rogue with own currency

British city goes rogue with own currency
Updated 17 August 2012
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British city goes rogue with own currency

British city goes rogue with own currency

AS BRITAIN loses faith in its banks and feels shockwaves from the euro crisis, one city is trying to keep local wealth in local pockets with the launch of its own currency.
The Bristol pound — usable only with member businesses in the city in southwest England — is to launch in September, and organizers are deluged with local firms wanting to sign up.
“The perception of banking and money is that it’s a very ruthless system: People are out for what they can get,” co-founder Ciaran Mundy told AFP.
“This is about saying yes to something new. It’s tapping into a different set of values about money.”
The scheme has “captured people’s imaginations,” he added, in a recession-hit year when British banks have been beset by scandals and ministers talked openly of a possible euro collapse.
Hundreds of businesses have joined, from the acclaimed Arnolfini arts center to the Chandos deli chain, and the launch had to be postponed from May to Sept. 19 because of the level of interest.
Security professional Richard Wright signed up his company Wright Guard as soon as he heard about the Bristol pound, hoping it would help him fight back against encroaching security giants.
“I’m Bristol born and bred, and I always want to support local businesses,” he told AFP. “I’ll want to keep the Bristol pound flowing.”
The notes feature symbols of local pride from nineteenth-century religious writer Hannah More to the Concorde aircraft, partly developed in Bristol, and images of the St. Paul’s Carnival Caribbean street festival.
Evoking a long history of dissent, one side of the £5 note shows a tiger writing on a wall in graffiti: “O Liberty!“
Other British towns have launched local currencies, but Bristol, home to half a million people, is the first big city, and its scheme is ambitious.
Businesses can pay local taxes in Bristol pounds and the council has offered its 17,000 staff the option of receiving part of their pay in the currency.
Mundy’s team — funded initially by grants — have designed an electronic system for payments by text message, plus what they say are forgery-proof notes.
Stores selling products from cider to skate shoes said they were considering joining the scheme, which Mundy believes will have a tangible economic effect.
“Eighty percent of the money leaves the area if it is spent with a multinational — but 80 percent stays if it is spent at a local trader,” he said.
Such localism might seem strange in a city that grew to prosperity as an international port and is now a center for aircraft manufacture.
But Bristol is also a left-wing haven with an activist tradition. The People’s Republic of Stokes Croft, an urban renewal group, made headlines last year with a campaign that became a riot in protest at the opening of a Tesco supermarket.
They have greeted the Bristol pound warmly.
“We need to run things from the bottom up and from the grassroots, so that people have control over how things happen where they live,” said spokesman Chris Chalkley.
But Louisa Jones and Joh Rindom, co-owners of Stokes Croft vintage clothing store Shop Dutty, thought the scheme would just add to their administrative burden.
“We’re skeptical that having a micro economy within a macro economy is a bit backward,” Rindom said.
Ben Yearsley, investment manager at Bristol-based financial services firm Hargreaves Lansdown, also won’t be rushing to convert his sterling.
“It’s just a big gift voucher scheme... I’m skeptical that it’s going to make any difference,” he told AFP.
“Local businesses need to compete on quality and service.”
The Bristol pound will not be legal tender and must be exchanged through the Bristol Credit Union, with a three percent charge for conversion back to sterling.
This and charges on electronic transactions will pay its running costs.
Despite the naysayers, Mundy hopes hundreds of thousands of Bristol pounds will be traded in its first year, increasing to “double figures of millions” by the third.
His model is the Chiemgauer, a German complementary currency of which millions of euros’ worth is traded yearly.
Online database complementarycurrency.org lists more than 225 such minority currencies worldwide, of which 102 are in Europe.
They have won a high-profile advocate in Bernard Lietaer, a Belgian economist who helped design and implement the convergence mechanism for the euro.
“We will never have a stable, sustainable monetary system with a single monopoly of a single type of currency, whoever manages it,” he said in a lecture in Brussels.
“Everybody can do something at their own scale... sustainability requires diversity,” he added.
Mundy said that the ultimate test of his system would be the market.
“If people freely decide to market and trade with each other (in the currency), they should be able to do it,” he said.
“If we’re not doing a good job they won’t use the system. Consumers will decide.”